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W-0'iBiniinMiiiiitiwnpwwMwwwBMWMMeawKiw- JLLjmmmmammimmw im m i wun nwwm , , n n i iMj h i m m i imniiiiiiiiimi wiiiiimwiiiimiiiimiii iiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiwwiii 1111 miiiimiiiiiiimiiwiiiiimiii in i i n nimi m i i i i 11 m n in itit r "'HriT'iii nr r irrr i t I -: " r RATES OF ADVERTISING Onesqrtare, three insertions............. 92 00 bach bobseqnent Insertion, per square......... ou One square, three monthB 4 00 One square, six months ............... 6 00 One sartaro.one year .. . 10 00 One-eighth colnmn, three months 8 00 One-eighth column, six montns w iu One-eighth colnmn, one year . 20 00 One-fourth column, three months...- 12 00 One-fourth column, six months 18 CO Ono-fourth column, one year 30 00 Half-column, six months .'. 30 00 Half -column, one year . 60 W. One column, one year ........ ltO 00 Business cards, 6 Hues or less, 1 year......-. 6 CO S"The above rates will be strictly adhered to TERMS : VOL. LIV, NO. 24-WHOLE NO. 2783. Ingle Subscription. In advance.... tt Uiubs ...., ft hi) 1 fc. CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1890. NEW SERIES-VOL. 29, NO. 1483. Democrat ana watchman. jl u s jl w , ,A , . fij II r II S I S Pi I P !Pl r 111 II I H HIT I fllH M 1 1 n i l Mil Orcein Wagnar's Block, East Main Street v V S U ftwanati & Muskingum Valley fiail-way Company. H KFFKCT NOV. 23, 1890. Trains loava Oirc'eviUe on Central Tims, EASTWARD. No. 20. flinoinuatL... ......., Morrow.. Wilminfrtno Sa'v)ina. Vt'ash'n O.H , New Ro'.lend ClaOLB 7 Lancaster Janct'n City ..... N. Lexington , Pntn.vn vinnsr:He...... Trinway. ......... Oonnis m 8 cen ban viile. Pittsburgh..-. B-iitimore ..........., Philadelphia New York No. . No. U. 8.20 J 11.16 a.m 4 30p.m 7.06 - 12.55 p.m 5 45 7 50 - 1.88 s 93 . 8 11 - 2 02 . U6 8 3- 2.'i5 . 7.08 ! 8 .53 2 47 7 26 9.23 - .2J - 8.05 , ( 10.15 4.16 ; 10 44 - 4.45 ' 10.63 - 4.55 . ! 11.40 . 6 46 . : 11.61 . 6 00 12 27 p.m .3-2.45 . - i 4.20 12.34 ir, : 6.66 . 2.au , 6.15 a.m 1 dp.m 8.25 . i.w ' 8-00 I 4.00 airl: Wa -ft" 0. H. with 1. T. W. vr . ia . w n i ra. ' !hinirton O. H. with D. T. t.r titt, nL -SXtnern trains north; at Laacas-A'.L ",rt 3r Vallev trains south: and Jnnat. with T trains nortb ; at New Lxlnton ritb O. O. train for Ooralng; and at Triuway a V O. trains for Objvelacd. . 20 connects at Oircleviile with 3. V. trains .tftHd from Ooiumbnc. WKSTWARD. !H-w York Philadelphia. - ."Baltimore .. "Pittsburgh.-. StcobeuTiUe. rnTiison -... Trinway...-. , iaee villa. .-.... ...... PnMhnn N. Lexington Junct'n City LanoaHter ... OIBOLB V Hew Holland.... Wash'n O.H SaMna Wilmington U rrow ..... . Olucinnati No.T. 6-Sf'p.m I 8.45 i 7 25 a.m ! 9.04 ,11.00-' 1.20pm i 2.05 . ! 2.09 ! 2 67 - , 3.86 ! 3.46 . 4.27 : 4.68 ! 6.17 - , 5.87 1 01 6.40 7.56 . No. 19. S.TOa.m IV 25 R.45 7.08 7.30 8.10 9.46 No.ll. 4.S5p.m 4.33 - 6.15a. "eio" 7.35 . 7.40 . 8.28 . 8.37 . 9.15 . 10.C6 . 10.45 . 11.07 . 11.30 . 11.55 . 12.35 p.l 2.2.0 . Connections : No. 11 at New Lexington with T. O. 0. trains for Corning ; at Junct. Cilv with B. O. trains north and south ; at Tjancaster with O. H. V. T. trin north and south; at Washington C, H. with Ohio Southern trains south. Ko. t at Junct. City with B. It 0. trains south; at Brensen with T. A O. O. train north ; at Lancaster with trdlu north and south; at Washington G. H. with D. V. W. & 0. train for Wellston ; at Cincinnati with train for Chicago and L. A N. trains for the South . No 19 at Washington 0. H. with D. T. W. A 0. and Ohio Southern trains north, and at Morrow with L. M train No. 10 for the east. F. M. WILKINSON, Oon. Pass. Agent, 0. H. WALTON, Supt., Zanesville, O. Eanesvillt. 0. H. B. MORRIS, Circleville Agent. NORFOLK &. WESTERN (Scioto Valley Division ) LOCAL IX EFFECT JUNE IS, 1890. ATTORNEYS. J. WHEELER LOWE, ATTORNKT-AT-LAW. Office in Van Heyde's Block. Court Street, Circleville, Ohio. Jnne 21 139. J. W. HARSHA, ATTOBN 1 Y-AT-LA W, Odd Fellows Block, CIBCLKVILLE, OHIO. JOHN SOHLEYER, A TTOBNBT-AT-LAW, CIBCLKVILLE, O. Of-xx fee. Booms 14 and 16, Masonic Temple. LEE M. HAMMEL, A TTOBNET-AT-LAW. Office in Boom over Wallace's Dry Goods Store, OIBCLKVILLK O Nov. 19, 1888. ADOLPH GOLD FREDRICK. ATTOBNBT AT LAW, Masonio Temple, Circle-villa, Ohio. CLARENCE CURTAIN, TTOBNET-AT-LAW, Olroleville, Ohio. Offloe jT3l in Odd Follows' Blook, HILT KOBBIS. SMITH & MORRIS, ATTOBNSYS-AT-L AW.OiroleTille, Ohio, in Masonic Temple. OOm SAMUEt. W. COTJRTRIQET, (Lt Judge of the Court of Common PIom,) 4 TTORNET-AT-LAW, Oirolevllle. Ohio. OMoe In Occrtright'a new block. OonrtstrMt, north of Min. X. K. A UtiNKTHT. HKHRT . FOLSOM . ABSRNETHY & FOLSOM, A TTOBNVS-AT-LAW,Oireiville,Ohio. Ofllee XX. in Old Masonio Block, formerly occupied by H. F. Page. J. P. WINSTEAD, A TTOKNHT-AT-LAW AND NOTARY PTTBLIO, jTV Circleville, Ohio. Oftioe in Odd Fellows' building, second storv, corner room. PHYSICIANS. CHARLES NATJMANN, (H0M(EOPATHIST.) PHYSICIAN AND 8UBG1C0N. Office in tha Nightingale Block, opposite Oonrt House, Oir-oleville, Ohio, GEORGE T. ROW, PHYSICIAN AND SI7BGX0N. Office and res idence, Bast Main street, first door east of Harsha's Marble Works, Circleville, Ohio. ' WILDER & BOWERS, PHYSICIANS AND STJBGEONS. OScein Peok Block. Kn trance on Court street, in rear of Evans A Krimmel's. A. W. THOMPSON. T. J. WBIOHT THOMPSON fc WRIGHT, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Lnng and other chest diseases a specialty. Pneumatic cabinet sittings from 10 to 11 a. n . and 1 to 2 p. h. except Sunday. Office on. Court street, one door north of City Building. Dsmocut ami Watchman. Is a constitutional and not a local disease, and therefore It cannot be cured by local applications. It requires a constitutional remedy like Hood's Sarsaparilla, which, working through the blood, eradicates the Impurity which causes and promotes the disease, and effects a permanant cure. Thousands of people testify to the success of Hood's Sarsaparilla as a remedy for catarrh when other preparations had failed. Hood's Sarsaparilla also builds up the whole system, and makes you feel renewed in health and strength. N. B. If you decide to try Hood's Sarsaparilla do not be induced to buy any other. " I used Hood's Sarsaparilla for catarrh, and received great relief and benefit from it The catarrh was very disagreeable, causing constant discharge from my nose, ringlnj noises in my ears, and pains in the back ol my head. The effect to clear my head in thf morning by hawking and spitting was pain ful. Hood's Sarsaparilla gave me relief to mediately, while in time I was entireli cured. I think Hood's Sarsaparilla is wortl its weight in gold." Mrs. G. B. Gibb, 1021 Eighth Street, N.W., Washington, D. C. "Hood's Sarsaparilla has helped me mort for catarrh and impure blood than anythini else I ever used." A. Ball, Syracuse, N. Y, Sold by druggists. 01; six for $6. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. lOO Doses One Dollar arsaparilla Gov. Hoard, of Wisconsin, as soon as be turns over his office to Gov.-elect Peck, will speak in several States on dairy topics. This may or may not include an explanation of the milk in the political cocoanut, which in some cases is found to be quite sour. There will be one colored Represen tative in the new Congress just elected and none in the Senate. H. P. Cheatham is re-elected by 1,240 majority in the Second North Carolina district, and the only Republican in the delegation. Cheatham is a bright mulatto, a college graduate and one of the most respected men of his race. Sold by druggists. $1 ; six for g5. Prepared only by U. I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar SHE WAS POISONED! A. P- OOURTRIGHT, J3HYSI0IAN AND SURGEON, Circleville, Ohio. E. A. VAN RIPER, FEMALE PHYSICIAN. I am prepared to treat all of the diseases pertaining to the human sys tem. Obstetrics a specialty. Office and residence. fourth house east of Farmers' Exchange Mill, Oircleviile. 0. March 16, 1888. G. W. BUTLER, Veterinary Surgeon. OFFICII. Residence and Stable, corner Court and Hieh Streets, CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO. Telephone No. 63. TRAINS GOING SOUTH. STATION'S. No. 2. ; No. 4. fcc. Oolan.bns. Lv. 7.35 a.m 12.10 p.nj 5. 50 p.m Infirmary " 12 24 ' 6 04 " Valley Crossing. ' 7,63 " 12,29 " 6 09 - Reese's " 7.66 " 12.32 " 6 12 - Lockbonrne ' 8 03 " 12.39 " 6.19 - Duvall's.- " 8.09 12.46 ' 6.25 - Ashville " 8.16 " 12.52 " 6.32 - Olroleville. ......... 8.33 " l.U " 6 51 - Hayosvillo " " 1.29 " 7.00 Klmwod " 1.2S " 7.06 - Kingston.......... 8 50 " 1 30 " 7.10 - Kinnikinnick 8.50 " 138 7.18 - Hopetown " 1 45 ' 7,25 " Ar. vbilltooih " 911 " 1.55 ' 7,ai - Lv. Chillicothe " 9.12 " 1.58 7.40 .. Three Locks " 2.07 " ... Hlgby'i 9-32 ' 2.20 haron...... " 9.39 " 2.28 " Waverly " 9.47 ' 2 37 " 8.14 ). S. Crossing .... " 9.43 " 2 39 " 8J5 - r.'iketon.. ' 9.59 " 2 49 8.25 TBig Run. ..... " 10.11 3.03 " ;joheon's .... " 10.18 " 810 " LucasviUe " 10 25 " 3.18 " 8.40 " iOavis ' i.26 Portsmouth ..." 1045 ' 3,48 " OS O. N.W. Depot 10 47 3,42 " 9.07 - i ,eiotovi!le . " 1100 S.56 ' Wueelemburg 1 1 05 4.01 " (Tratklio Furnace.. " H.15 " 4.12 " :Ha?orb.ill " 11.21 " '.20 " Bantrinfr Bock " H SO 4.30 Ironton. " 11.40 " 4 42 9 55 - Petersburg " 11.60 6 00 " 10.05 - A.0.4 1Janctid.Ar. 12t0p.a 6.f0 10.25 - YafcWnd 12.20 " 5.30 " 10.35 - Trains Nos. 2 and 0 dally. Trin !o. 4 dniW. excent Snndav. At stations where time is omitted, trains do not ton. Through Cars. All Columbus and Ashland trains ars tbrouarh without chance. No. 2 has Pullman Palw Sl-cniig and Reclining Chair Car Chicago to Aahland via Chicago atlhti-, Columbus Hocking Valley Toledo and 8cioto Valley Rallwoys . TRAINS GOING NORTH. spf atiohs. No, 1. No. 3. No. S. Ashlard Lv. S.30a.m S.00 a.m 4.30p.m A. 0. ; I. Junction. " 3 40 D.10 " 4,4ii " Peterbcrg 40fl - 9 30 " 500 !ro.ton " 4.10 - 3.40 - 5.10 - Hanging Book ... " 4 17 - 9.50 " 5.20 - Kavstb.ll .. " 10.01 - 5.30 - J ranklin Furnace. " 10.09 5.36 Wneelersburg . " 10.20 - 5.45 - intotoville " 4.45 - 10.25 " 5.50 - Oi S.W. Depot.- " 4.58 - 10.38 - 6.03 - J-orMmouth ." 6.00 10.45 - 6.0S - Davis 10.68 - lMCaville M9 11.05 - 6.25 - Johnson's. " 11.12 - 6.32 - (.ig Hun " ft 31 11,19 6.38 - PiW-tcn " 6.2 11.83 " 6.61 - O. S. Crossing .. " 5-61 " 11.43 - 7.00 Waverly 6.S3 11.45 - 7.02 - Sharon . " 6 01 " 11.64 - 7.10 - Kigby'B 6.08 - l?.03S.m 7.18 - Three Locks " 1214 " Ar. Oai'.Hoothe " 6 30 " 12 25 - 7.40 - Lv. Chillicothe " 6 50 " 13.45 " 7.50 - H.netown " 6 59 - 12.55 - - Kinnikinnick " 7 05 - i.tq - 8.05 - Kingston " 7 12 - l.ln - 8.11 - Elmwood " T.'T " 1.14 - . Hi.y.rfUe " 7.22 - 1.20 Circleville... '!t' " 1.27 - 8. SO - Ashville , " 7.60 1.46 - 8.49 - Dnvall's 7.67 1.53 - lockbonrne. " 8.03 " 1.59 9.00 - r-eese's " S.09 2.06 9.07 - V liy Crossing. ... ' S12 - 2.09 9.10 - Inftrsnsry " S-17 - 2 '5 - 0ium!ios Ar. S.30 - 2.30 - 9.30 - Trains Nos . 1 and 6 daily. rv:in S). 3 daily, except Sunday. Train So. 1 takes breakfast at Chillicothe. Tr:tii rlo. 3 tuses Dinner at Obiliiuothe. Ar. stHcions whore time is emitted trains do not ton Through Oars. ill Ashland and Colnmbns trains ar thronch wiihout change. No 5 has Pulluis Pa'ice Sleeping and Reclining Chair Car Ashlam to 'hicio via Scioto Valley, ..lnmbns H.ickingVal ley & Toledo ana .Thicag s Atlantic Kalways. Coupon Tloltots By . he Best Routes and to al! principal points i the United States and Canada, can De found at the following Stations C0LU8US, CHILLI "OTHE, IRONTON CiFJCLEViLLE, WAVERLY.A. C. & I. Jc KINGSTON, PORTSMOUTH, ASHL NO for further; nfoTmatioR relative to rftt. connec- Honsaua taronu .im.calion yoar licfc-et Agent, or vaareiia( , ISO. J. ARCHER, J. ROBINSON, G,P.$T. Ag't. Gm'l Supt. COLUMBCS, OHIO. Not by anything she drank or took, but -y luitl !o;!. Irs it any wonder she eels "blue" in most oases blues are rJy another name for bad blood. A man r woman feels uuhar.pv. Life seems ark. Tna hears U 1m?'.t- Bnl blood is irrying it3 pobon all orer ihu body, and a ca.il it " bices." ih'&i ib.n.ie experiences : Mis. C. C. iJutcbinson, of Pittston, Pa., ivs : " I consider Dr. Acker's English -iood Eiixir tiie best medicine in the vovld, not only for blood troubles, but Jso for dyspepsia, with, which I have oen aitneted. Both my wife and mvself firmlv be- ievet'nat Di Anker's English Blood Elixir ti the best of all blood medicines, and will -emo"8 all impurities of the blood." (iEO. V. fetJGiER, Vauey City, Dak. This grand Elixir is sold by druggists in all parts oi America, it is a pure, honest medicine ; not a cheap sarsapa- LUa. Try it to-day. GIRARD WILLIAMS, Civil Engineer and Surveyor. Farm Drainage a -specialty. OFFICE : 0. A. Clark's Drugstore, Wit. STERLING, O. BfitlTSVS For LOST or FAILING MANHOOD; HrlllCS General and NERVOUS DEBILITY: fTTT? "F1 'Weakness of Body and Mind: Effects V aJ JLvJU of Errors or Excesses in Old or Young, BobnBt. Noble HAMIOOD TqIIt RMtorrd. How to Enlarro ind Strengthen UrKAK.l'MieVRLOT'KI) ORGANS 1'A RT8 of BOnY. Absolutt7 unfalllnr HOMS THKATHBST Bt-n.SU la a day. men tesliry rrora SI stxtel, lrntortea, ana foreign t,ontrles. os can write taem. Book, fall explanation, and proofa mailed lHaled) free. Address ERIE MEDICAL .0., BUFFALO, N. Y. E. J. LILLY., M. D. DENTIST, OFFICE IN W1TTICH S NEW BLOCK CIRCLEVILLE 0., A. M. ABEENATHY, u. AUTHORIZED S. Pension & Claim Att'v, j FIVE POINTS, OHIO, Presents and pro8eutes all claaacs of claimi for PAnaiona.UT.dAr both the new and old. New. In crease and RjN:ted Claims a specialty. Back pay and bounty claims collected. No fee in any Pension claim unless sncceinful. Many are entitled to peniions who bare never applied. Thousands ate entitled to an increase of pension, and would get it were thf ir claims put in proper shape. Oonsultation fren. Correspondence srltcitMl. Ad- dress A. M. ABERMATHY. Box l and 2. Five Points, Ohio. Aug 22, 180O-6sa. lLBAUG k LMi UNDERTAKERS! We have a complete stock of Under .iking Goods, from the finest to thf oiv-ost, and our prices are reasonable SVe Make a Specially of Embalming wiihout Extra Charge, We have the Boyd Burglar Grrave Vault. Proof We Make NO EXTRA CHARGE for Hearse feervices. Witt thanks for past patronage, we ..elicit a snare oi tiie same in the fu '.are. Albaugh 8z Lanum To ours B'lionsness, Sick Headache, Constl-pa'.ion, M.'thiri.i, Liver Complaints, take tha saio and certnin remedy, Ft ? Rp 1 13 ar Lea t T3 the S?I All. Size ffOUttle Beans to the bvulz). Thev Auii rnr; aor co.svbn"'nt. BuitAile tor I A iJLf5. Prl?J (' eitd?r sie, USc. per Tiottle. 'fHHTCaslVi'Rt 1 PAN v-x, 6IZS. fcf ri'rtrt or sUnt J.F.SiKiIHaC(i.-Makerot"i'.li.miSAXS, 'ST.iOil!S (.10. rrVk fclkSSbJtSi SJ S-M Malie ! for IrU. e LiYery. Sals asi'M Stable rTlHS undersigned wonld inform the pubilctha JL ne is prepared to lurnisa them with Horses, Buggies, Carriages On Reasonable Terms, at tbeoM stand on Franklin Street, where citizens and strangers can be accommodated at all hoars of dav and nivht. Horses boarded by the day or week at reasonable terms. the patronage oi tbepubliois respectfully solicited W. H- ALBATJGH. OILY! ITTInE i PSLLS. ERS . SIckHeaaacheaitii i -.'licve all tlie troubles incident to a bilious stttre of the systein, such as Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness. Distress after eating. Pain in the Sido. &c. While their inogt remarkable success has been shown in curing Headache, yet Carteu's Little Liver PLta are equally valuable iu Constipation, curing and preventing this aitnoTing complaint, "while they also correct all disorders of tiie st;.macr stimulate the livor and regulate ihe bowel. JLvea if they only cured 33 t.-2S fg& Ache thy would he almost Trice.css to tbosa who suffer from this distressing- comlainc; but fortunately their goodnesi does not nd here, ana thoo who once tr nit-m win mid these little pills valuable in so many ways that they will not be willing to do without ths.a. But after all sick head in the bane of so rqauv lives that Tiere la where we make our greiit boast. Our pills cure at while others do not. Carter's Little Liver Pitas are very snw. and very easy to take. One or two pills ntakt a dose. They are sfrietly vp.'tal!le and not jrripe or v'e, but by their ci-ntle action please all who use thtin. In vials at 25 cent five for $1 . Sold everywhere, or Pent by mai CAETE2 fcEMCUfa C0.( w Tori. REMARKABLE RESCUE. : Mrs. Michael Curtain, Plninfield, Illinois, makes tbe statement that she caught cold, which settled on her luncrs; she was treated for a month by the family physician, but she gre.y worse. He told her ;he was a tope- less victim oi consumption and that no medicine could cure her. Rer druggist suggested Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption ; she bought a bottle and to her delight found herself benefited from the first dose. She continued its use and after taking ten bottles, found herself sound and well, now docs her own housework and is as well as she ever was. Free trial bottles of this Great Discovery at Evans & Krimmel's drug store, large bottles 50c. and $1. HAPPY HOOSIERS. Wm. Timmons, Postmaster of Idaville, Ind., writes: '-Electric Bitters has done mors! for me than all other medicines combined, for that bad feeling arising from kidney and liver trouble." John Leslie, farmer and stockman, of same place, says: " Find Electric Bitters to be the best kidney and liver medicine, made me feel like a new man." J. W. Gardner, hardware merchant, same town, says: Electric Bitters is just the thing for a man who is all run down and don't care whether be lives or dies : he found new strength, good appetite, and felt just like he had a new lease on life. Only 50c. a bot tie, at Evans & Krimmel's drug store. Arabian Oil the marvelous healer and pain enre. IS LIFE WORTH LIVING? Not if you go through the world a dyspeptic. Dr. Acksr's Dyspepsia Tablets are a positive cure :or tbe worst forms of dyspepsia, indigestion, flitnleney and constipation Guaranteed and sold by J. G. Wilder, drug gist. Arabian Oil, the best stock liniment in the world. Catarrh 5S a blood disease. Until trie poison is expelled from the system, there car be no cure for this loathsome' and. dangerous malady. Therefore, the only effective treatment is a thorough course of Ayer's Sarsaparilla the best of all blood purifiers. The sooner you begin the better ; delay is dangerous. " I was troubled with catarrh for over two years.- I tried various remedies, and was treated by a number of physicians, but received no benefit until I bejiau to take Ayer's Sarsaparilla. A few boti it s of this medicine cured lne of this troublesome complaint and completely restored my health." Jesse M. Boggs, Holman's Mills, N. C. ""When Ayer's Sarsaparilla was recommended to ine for catarrh, I was in-clitiru to doubt its efficacy. Having tried so many remedies, with little benefit, I had no faith that anything -would cure me. I became emaciated from loss of appetite and impaired digestion. I had nearly lost the sense of smell, Rnd my system was badly deranfred. I was about discouraged, when a friend urged me to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and referred me to persons whom it had cured of catarrh. After taking half a dozen bottles of this medicine, I am convinced that the only sure way of treating this obstinate disease is through the blood." Charles H. Maloney, 113 ltiver St., Lowell, Mass. yer's Sarsaparilla, PREPARVD BT Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Price $1; six bottles, $5 Mass. Worth $5 a bottle. Oae hundred dolhrs for a case of scratches Arabian 0.1 will not cure. A DUTY TO YOURS riLF. Ii is surprising that people will use a com uou. orJinary oill when they can secure.a r-iiia'e. English one tor the same money D. Ac-feer's English Pills are a positive cure ' r sick headache aad all liver troubles, Ttiey are small, sweet, easily taken and do act gripe. J. G. Wilder, druggist, EL Tills "s ratio ( Mark Is on J THe Best CoHt In the world. jla Livery, Sale asi Feel Mc Li I PACKAGE PRQF.HARRJS'g arm FOR THE CURE OF VITALLY WSASO, Madias by too close application to instuess or BtmW: severe nwuta! stmiu or grief; SKXl'AL CXCKSSKSiu ir.td'Uelire.or vicious habits wmmrted in vnuin. HEMt MB! n TMTiasio ni ttvjis iM.mi.ny ,.r OtUSTAKY 10SSKS KARLV 11 1 AV In Tot r.U and J11U- LE A0K0; lacb of vlo, vigor, niul strength, ithfrjriiai organs mpnfreil and weakened pi imntHrpiy in :tipro:icliln;x old nge. flfHEH m SAY CynEoTVKtvViirsl-rl a maDT thoimnd cses trenteduud cured pat twelve years, " 1 . r..:.i. :n T, tt ' 1SS SOLTTflli! MirDT.0ATEDPaSTrLL23 jnisi we offer e.sht nays trial i. ..ttl.t i LI.Y FK1.B. " " "All men, voi.nij or clil, suffering from this prevalent tio. e should send their -id.trcs so woean furhlsh luestiou4 tobeuaswered, th:it -v? luay kuor tlie tri'e condition Meaehcase and pjeparo mwlicire to effect a prompt cure. iocaiea 1DJ.CW inrsini.ri . i.;.. a. i.euts,, we oner ill a chance to be cured or the celehrated Pabtille Treatment. THE HARRIS RiMSDY CC, Wlf. Chemists. 89 BEEKUAN STUS l'. NEW YORK. The reaotion in favor of a licensed liquor traffic, as shown in the local elections in Massachusetts, is crediia ble to the good sense and honesty of the voters. Prohibition is hypocrisy. It does not 'stop liquor selling nor liquor-drinking It only adds deceit, lying and law-breaking to the inevita ble evils of ..the traffic. And it interferes with personal liberty in a most offensive and unjustifiable manner. Massachusetts is growing away from bigotry and Pharisaism. The Russian exports of carpet wools to this country have been seriously ob structed by the McKinley Tariff act. But what do the sheep-raisers of this country gain by prohibiting a class of wool which they do not produce ? All that the duty on carpet wool accomplishes is an increase in the cost of carpets, a diminution in consumption of carpets, and a consequent loss of employment to carpet weavers. But we are told to wait patiently and see the beneficent results of the McKinleytariff. Workingmen who stop occasionally to think, in the drudgery of their daily grind, will be apt to ask themselves if their wages have not been lowered by the operation of the McKinley tariff. The prices of commodities having been advanced, unless wages shall be ad vanced in like ratio the effect will be tantamount to a reduction of wages commensurate with the increased cost of living. The workman who earns $2 per day, and who has to pay more for his clothing and other necessary purchases, will find that his $2 has shrunk in its ability to help him care for his family and himself. Unless those producers who advance the prices of their goods shall simultaneously advance the pay of their employes, and unless all consumers shall find from some source additional income enough to meet ad ditional expenditure, the increased tariff will only operate to add to the profits of a few persons at the expense of everybody else. Gordon and Pugh. The Philadelphia Times, 28th ult,, says : The re-election of Senator Pugh, of Alabama, like General Gordon's elec tion in Georgia, is a notable triumph of honest character and sound cpnserva tism. It is another proof that the Farmers' Alliance, though important and powerful, is not the revolutionary or ganization tnat many timid persons have supposed. Mr. Pugh is respected by the farmers as by all the people of Alabama, but like General Gordon, he refused to commit himself to the wild schemes that some of them proposed, and there was an earnest movement against him. But his personal strength withstood at tack and little by litte the opposition weakened, till yesterday the Legislature chose him for another term. He is a man of high character, of sound knowledge and of ripe experi ence, and his defeat would have been a loss to Alabama and to the Senate. out an attempt to overturn the most magnificent and creditable thing in Indiana's history our boss-proof,corruption-proof election law the working- man's protection and shield against the oppression of employers and the control of the rich, and the honest man's chance." The Norfolk and Western Railroad will build a line from Riverton, Va., on the Shenandoah Valley, recently purchased by the Norfolk and Western, to Washington, D. C, a distance of 70 miles. The Shenandoah Valley will hereafter be known as the Maryland and Washington Division of the Norfolk aud Western. There can be no doubt that Mr.Blaine is "in the field" for 1892. The careful Washingiou correspondent of the Bos ton Journal says there are indications that Secretary Blaine is not averse to the circulation of the report that he is a candidate for the Presidency. This is truly a very open secret. The dispo sition to drop President Harrison is no longer disguised, even by leading Republicans, usually politic. "Once is enough for him." Wages and Tariffs. The notion that high wages depend upon or result from high tariffs will be thoroughly exploded by the McKinley Act, says the New York World. The new law advanced duti s 33 per cent. There has been no advance in wages in protected industries. On the contrary, the tendency is towards a decline. The total average percentage of labor cost in manufactured articles is not over 20 per cent. Yet Mr. M.Kinley's subser vient followers gave the manufacturers an average duty of 60 per cent upon the transparently false pretense of "protecting American labor." They re jected all propositions to imbed in the law a provision giving to labor in increased wages the difference between the selling price of protected American products and of imported competing articles. A high duty may enable a pro tected manufacturer to pay higher wages if he is willing to forego "living like a prince" and heaping up a big for tune. But there is nothing in the law to compel or restrain him to do so. A high tariff does not produce high wages, but it does add to the cost of living to every workingman in the country. , At the Turn of the Road. Oliver Wendell Homes, in the Atlantic. The glory has passed from the golden- rod s plume, The purple hued asters still linger in bloom ; The birch is bright yellow, the sumachs are red. The maples like torches aflame over head. But what if the joy of the Summer is past, And Winter's wild herald is blowing Ms Dlast l For me dull November is sweeter than May, For my love is its sunshine she meets me to day ! Will she come ? Will the ring-dove re turn to her nest ? Will the needle swing back from the east or the west I At the stroke of the hour she will be at her gate : A friend may prove laggard love nev er comes late. Do I see her afar in the distance ? Not yet. Too early 1 Too early ! She could not forget! When I cross the old bridge where the brook overflowed She will flash full in sight at the turn of the road. I pass the low wall where the ivy en twines ; I try the brown pathway that leads through the pines : I haste by the boulder that lies in the field, Where her promise at parting was lov ingly sealed. Will she come by the hillside or round through the wood I Will she wear her brown dress or her mantle and hood ? The minute draws near but her watch may go wrong ; My heart will be asking : What keeps her so long I Why doubt for a moment? More shame if 1 do I Why question ? Why tremble ? Are angels mora true ? She would come to the lover who calls her his own Though she trod in the track of a whirl ing cyclone ! I crossed the old bridge ere the minute had passed. I looked ; lo ! my love stood before me at last. Her eyes, how they sparkled, her cheeks, how they glowed, As we met, face to face, at the turn of the road ! The riht way to cure catarrh is to eradi cite the poisonous taint which causes the disease, by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. WE CAN AND DO Goarantee Dr. Acker's Blood Elixir, for it has been tully demonstrated to tbe people oi this country that it is superior to ail other preparations tor blood diseases. It is a pos ltive cure for syphilitic poisoning, ulcers, eruptions and pimples. It purifies tbe whol rystftui and thoroughly builds up the consti tution. J. G. Wildbe, druggist. Don't I If a dealer offers you a bottle of Salvation Oil in a mutilated or defaced pack-1 age don't buy it at any price it may be a dangerous and worthless counterfeit. Insist upon getting a perfect, unbroken, genuine package. A CHILD KILLED. Another child killed by the use of opiates given in the lorm of soothing syrup. Why mothers give their children such deadly poison is surprising when they can relieve tbe child of its peculiar troubles by using Dr Acker's Baby Soother It contains no opium or morphine. Sold by J G. Wilder, drug fiist.' To have fine horses use Arabian OU, the horse nervine. The Republican members of Congress who refused to discuss the Mc Kinley tariff bill before its passage, and who compelled a vote upon it before there was an opportunity to digest it, now complain that its provisions were misunderstood by the people when they voted at the recent elec tions. This complaint serves very well in default of any better way of accounting for Republican defeat, says the Philadelphia Record; but there is little doubt that the better the McKinley tariff is understood the more profound will be the popular dislike for it. The demand of the country is for lighter taxes, cheaper living, free raw materials, wider markets. A measure that increases taxation, adds to the cost of living, perpetuates the burden on raw material of manufacture, and narrows the field of commercial activity, offers a stone instead of bread. The people of the United States are neither dolts nor dunderheads. They know what tariff legislation they need, and they have elected Representatives who will carry out their wishes as far as possible. CAN'T SLSEP NIGHTS Is the complaint of thoueend3 suffering from asthma, consumption, coughs, etc. Did yon ever try Dr. Acker's English Remedy? It ie the best preparation known for all lung troubles Sold on a positive guarantee at ZbB. and 50c. J. G Wildkk, druggist. Livery men use Arabian Oil for scratches FULLEH & BALDWIN NEW RESTaUHANT, (B. BECHER'S OLD STAND.) TUB Finest Place in tbeOity. Open day and night. Hps' tr ordtr. Oysters in every style. Game ana Flab iu seaton. Xlie Milliard ftocr at tached bas been renovated and txvtte' trrstiged for visitors. Sit. U, 1098. JOHN-HENRY, (SVOOXSftOft T01TOMR BIN BT,) Setpeotfullytaformi tbe public that be ii prepared to farniih Horses, Buggies, Carriages ON SEASONABLE TKBMS, At the old stand on Franklin Street, where citizens e strangers can be accommodated at all hours of the day or nigat. ilorses boarded by t'.e day or week. The patronage of the public is respectfully solicited. JOHN HENRY. Farm for Rent. Pit 10 miles et of Circlevillo. noor Cllear-pert, O., oontaimni? S3 acres. Will r. nt for cash lant'onlv kof further particulars, rail ..n or ad-dr. M G S- KS" . 7. 1890. Clrolevllw, 0. fR3T8 ENTIRELY VEGETABLE, ThsMnsiEftaciivBBlQcdPuiifierKnoi'n bUAnArtleCtU a disorders! condition of the stomach and liver, unci, an lit liootm-fis, DTsprptia, .... Annol tf.Fiitlriiv-Ui HI nioicwD. m-MUHrutj, 11. Ii- marrhcpn. Lfer (Will.-is t. k Mr?T TntublrR, I JautHllcr, toni.inptlo, Serofuia, iamrri.. Khfuma- tlsm, tfrynlprMRii, bmi itiifBni, rtVtfl ARU HUUCi THE CLARKfi. B. C. tSEGICINE CO., Operative Chemist, Send a&lreei tor or A. Consumption Surely Cured. To Thk Editor: Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above-named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases nave been permanently cured. I shall be triad to send two bottles of my remedy FREE to any of your readers wuo have consumption if they will sena me tneir express ana P. O. address. Respect luuy, x. A. BiiUtJUjB., M. c, 181 Pearl St., H. X Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. Vlvn she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoivtb Ktmn she had Children, she gave them CastotisV Arabian Oil is guaranteed to cure all ail ' raenti of your ito. The ballot reform system worked well at the late election, wherever it was in force, but perhaps the most striking proof of its merit is furnished in Indiana, where the targe Democratic majority shows what can be accom plished in that State by an election en tirely, free from the shameless frauds which have so long corrupted the bal lot box. It was a complete preventive of the blocks of five and other fraudulent Republican schemes, and gave the Democrats the largest majority since the war. As the adoption of the Australian system was wholly the result of Democratic influences, the Indiana Democracy are highly gratified at this verification of their views regarding its value and necessity. The Republican fine workers, on the other hand, are already seeking its repeal, and if there was the slightest prospect of success they would make an attempt at it in the Legislature this winter. The honest Republican sentiment, however, is strongly in favor of the system, and the Indianapolis News warns the' Republican crooks who thrive off political bribery and corruption, in the fol lowing language: "The Republican newspapers of the State that are full ing in line opposing the new election law are piling up a fearful lot of material for use at the next election. The way the people whacked things on "terrible day" won't be a circumstance The Revolution of 1890 From Philadelphia Times (Ind.) The completeness of the popular revolution against the party in power can't be appreciated without analyzing the vote in comparison with the former votes of the revolutionized States. The assumption of the organs of the defeated party that this is an off year and that the vote is light, is ex ploded by the fact that there never was so large a vote polled in any off year in the hibtory of the country, and the Republican vote is obviously diminished not only by stay-at-homes, but by scores of thousands voting the Demo cratic ticket, The Northern States which elected Congressmen Sn tbe 4th of November gave, in round numbers, 410,000 Republican majority for Congress in 1888, and the same States gave, in round numbers, 200,000 Democratic majority in 1890. Of these States only Idaho, Nevada, North Dakota, South Dakota, Ohio and Pennsylvania gave Republi can majorities this year, and four of the six States thus voting elected only five Congressmen. Ohio gave only 11,-000 Republican majority, being about half the full party strength, and Fenn sylvania gave 37,000. The only import- tnt States in the electoral College of the whole North which voted in No vember in favor of the policy of the administration are Pennsylvania and Ohio, and Pennsylvania elected a Dem ocratic Governor and Ohio elected Democratic delegation to Congress. The impressive lesson of the late elections in the election of members of Congress in the North is in the fact that the Northern States which gave 410,000 Republican majority in 1888 gave 200,000 Democratic majority' in 1890; a change of over 600,000 in the popular vote and a change that is a more sweeping revolution tnan Has ever before been accomplished in the history of American politics. Should not these facts teach the party leaders in the present Congress that high taxes bewildering profligacy and the policy of Force must be fatal to any party su premacy? It is simply begging the question to offer the excuse that the eruption of the Farmers' Alliance uprooted parties and caused the revolution. The Far mers' Alliance, the Union Labor, the Wheelmen and all the other forms of organization the revolt assumed, all started on the platform of Tariff Re form, and the reduction of needless taxes was the slogan that inspired them to united effort. The fact that there was not a single Democratic candidate for Congress defeated before the people in a Democratic district by the Far mers' Alliance, or by any of the other anti-tax movements, in either the North or the South, conclusively proves that all these elements are in unity on the vital principle that has called them into organized political action; and that vital principle will force cohesion in one form or another until monopoly taxes are entirely eliminated from our political system And all of these different factors in the late revolution are equally united against national profligacy and against Force legislation of every type. The people who revolt against excessive taxes logically revolt against the profit gate waste of public revenues ; and they as logically revolt against govern ment by force, because such legislation is always revolutionary, demoralizing, and the precursor of national bank ruptcy. In short, there is only one ex plana tion of the revolution that has thrown two-thirds of the Electoral votes of the North against the party of power. It is a revolution against the monopoly greed portrayed in the Mc Kinley tariff; against the profligacy that has caused the first Treasury defi cit since the war, and against the resort to the policy of Force to legalize election frauds and maintain power against the popular will. If the present leaders in Congress don't so under- Ghrismas is Coming-. Oh, how I love my teacher's face, Oh, how 1 love to prav ! Oh, how I love this life of grace ! On, how they II miss me from place Just after Christmas day. New York Herald. this high into the air shovelfuls of grain, straw and chaff, the lighter materials being wafted to one side, while the grain, comparatively clean, would descend and form a heap by itself. In this manner all the grain in California was cleaned. At that day no such thing as a fanning mill had ever been brought to this coast. It is said that the number of deaths from diphtheria and scarlet fever in New York city every year reaches nearly 4,000, and are about equally'divided between the two maladies. The New York Medical Record says this enormous mortality means not less than 20,000 or 30,000 cases of sickness. The banking house of Barker Bros & Co., of Philadelphia, which was forced to close its doors on 20th ult., with lia bilities amounting to $3,000,000, was one of the oldest banking houses in the United States. Abraham Barker, the head of the firm, has been in the banking business for over fifty years. The Columbus Journal says : Twelve years ago General Thomas L. Young retired as Governor of Ohio. He was a favorite in this city. He was the successor of Hayes and predecessor of Bishop. Afterward he held a govern ment appointment and served two years in Congress. He died two years ago while serving as a member of the board of public affairs in Cincinnati. He had held as high a rank as a soldier as he had as a civilian. But it is well known that public life is not a desirable one so tar as providing tor the future of a family is concerned. Mrs. Young, the wid ow of the distinguished general, .Gov ernor and congressman, is now keeping a boarding house in Cincinnati, and compelled to care for herself and family. She has executive ability and is successfully managing her way for the best interests of her children. Only one Republican in the newly elected Legislature of Florida, and he is a hold-over Senator. The House is unanimously Democratic. The National Democrat which was es tablished in Washington one year ago by Edmund Hudson, with the indorse ment of many of the great leaders of the party, has entered upon its second year with a circulation of 40,000 copies each week. This is perhaps the largest circulation ever attained by a week ly newspaper during the first year of its existence. The National Democrat occupies a field of its own, and one that too long remained unfilled. It gives a complete record of political informa tion, including the most important speeches that are delivered by Democratic leaders in Congress and on the stump. It is rendering the party an important service, and should be read by all who wish to keep fully informed in regard to public affairs and who mean to defeat the wicked scheme of the Republican leaders to secure permanent control of the Government, in spite of the fact that they are, and must remain, the minority party in this country. France has raised the tariff on meat foods as follows : On beef from 20 fr. to 25 fr. per double cwt ; on mutton, from 28 francs to 32 francs ; on fresh pork, from 10 francs to 12 francs ; and on salted beef and other salted meats, except pork, from 22 to 27 francs. A franc is 20 cents. This is a part of France's reply to the McKinley bill. That bill helps the American manufacturer and hurts the American farmer; it gouges him in every section and robs him in every paragraph. It strikes at the French manufacturer. France re. plies by striking the American farmer, who is thus made the foot ball of the world. The farmer's great market and his surest one is in the manufacturing countries of Europe. The smaller the tariff tax on European products the better is the farmer's European mar ket Is the American farmer ready to throw away a certain and profitable market for a chance of making one where there is none at present, and for one that will not be of as much benefit after he gets it ? If so let him indorse Blaine's moonshine reciprocity scheme, But before he does this let him read the story of the dog that .dropped his piece of meat to grab the reflection in the water. If the farmer wants to know how much good Blaine's scheme can do him let him try to fatten his stock on pictures of haystacks and keep his family warm with photographs of blankets. 1 LOCAL CORRESPONDENCE. Palestine. (Deferred last week.) Henry T. Reay says there is a Demo cratic majority in his house now, one girl and three boys. The last one shied in his caster last Sunday James E. Campbell, Jr. and all doing well. Mrs. Joe Ketcham came near dying, last Sabbath, not having recovered from her confinement, several weeks ago. ' The lives of at least twelve children were saved, on Sunday night last, in this place. Taylor Heath's . cob shed collapsed, and the children were not under it, as it was in the night time. Rufus Ferrell came back, on Monday night last, to adjust matters at the depot, but went home again, not being able to take charge of the work. Oyster supper at Sallie Richards', in this plaoe, on Saturday night next, the proceeds to be applied to the care ol the church. Charles E. Fetherolf paid a flying visit to his parents, on thanksgiving He is wrapping armatures in the elec tric light works at the Jenrey ilanu facturing Co., of Columbus, O. Stontsvllle. (Deferred last week.l The Sunday Schools of this place, will observe Christmas with appropriate ceremonies. Stephens, the Kentuckian, who has been running Pool's mill, the past two years, removed with his iamiiy, to (Jol-umbus, O., last Monday. Dr. Bradford, of Oakland, has formed partnership with Dr. Huddle, of this place, and will move here this week The indications are that this will make Btrong team. The Women's Missionary Aid supper on Thanksgiving evening, netted them about $25. Dr. Kefauver and Miss Lizzie Baker were married on Wednesday, 3d inst., at 10 a. h. Chas. Stepleton has moved into the property lately vacated by breoree VV. Parks. The Coon Hunter's Syndicate have 18 coon pets caught this winter. On last Friday evening, Peter Good an inoffensive fellow, went into the sa loon of Nicholas Conrad, when upon the slightest provocation he was saulted by the old man Conrad and his son Joe. Good was knocked down with some blunt instrument, supposed to be billy, and badly used up. A war rant was sworn out for their arrest and placed in the hands of Constable Neff They were arrested at midnight by breaking in the door of their bed room, taken before Squire Harden, plead guilty to assault and battery, and lined $10 each and costs. Old Fashioned Harvesting. PICTURESQUE FARMING IN CALIFORNIA IN THE FORTIES. General Bidwell,'in the December Century. Harvesting, with the rude imple ments, was a scene. Imagine three or four hundred wild Indians in a grain field armed, some with sickles, some with butcher-knives, some with pieces of hoop iron roughly fashioned into shapes like sickles, but many having only their hands with which to gather by small handtuls the dry and brittle gram ; and as their bands would soon become sore, they resorted to dry wil low sticks, which were split to afford a sharper edge with which to sever th straw. But the wildest part was the threshing. The harvest of weeks, sometimes of a month, was piled up in the straw in the form of a huge mound in the middle of a hip-h. Btronff. round cor ral ; then three or four hundred wild horseb were turned in to thresh it, the Indians whooping to make them ru faster. Suddenly they would dash in before the band at lull speed, when th motion became reversed, with the ef fect of plowing up the trampled straw to the very bottom. In an hour the grain would be thoroughly threshed and the dry straw broken almost into chaff. In this manner I have seen two thousand bushels of wheat threshed in a single hour. Next came the winnow- would otten Real Estate Transfers. B. F. Whitehead and wife to Wm. H Hoover, 120 acres and 41 poles, Harri son township, quit claim, $901 02. James H. Hoover, et al, to Wm. M. Hoover, 120 acres and 41 poles, quit claim, Harrison township, $2, tOo.76. Henry P. Folsom and wife to Anna ii. Brown, $ acre, Circleville, jdio, W. L. Morgan and wife to Wm. Mor ris, Lots 43 and 44, Morgan, $130. W. L. Morgan and wife to James A Curry, Lot 28, Morgan, $100, W. L. Morgan and wife to David Westwater, Lot4o, Morgan, $100. W. L. Morgan and wife to J as. Ross, Lot 33, Morgan, $ 05 W. L. Morgan and wife to Angel Ross, Lot 4s, Morgan, $350. W. L. Morgan and wife to Thomas Noble, Lots 46 and 47, Morgan, 5130. Jas. T. Wallace, Sheriff, to Jacob F. Krinn, Lot 1250, Circleville, $710. Nelson F. Kinnear and wife to Thos H. Carpenter, 102 acres and 65 poles, Muhlenberg township, $a00 James T. Wallace, Sheriff, to Wm M. Hoover, 120 acres and 41 poles, Har rison township, $4,810.25, Peter S. Lutz and wife to Jonathan l - ... 1 , 1 .1 1. tarrMIIrl ntT.OY1 t.aa annth.. stand the lesson, it will be repeated tol montljl. j.t could only be done when to tha way in which they will knock them with increased emphasis in 1892. the wind wag blowing, by throwing H. Lutz, 14 acres and 13 poles, Salt creek township, $3b0. John T. Dowler and wife to Charles C. Morgan, 2 acres and 68 poles, Deer creek township, $J,ba0. Robert S. Yoakum and wife to Ame lia Gouchenouer, 5 acres, Scioto town ship, $450. David Sells and wife to Mahlon Mor ris, 14 square poles, Saltcreek township, $40. James Orr and wife to John ' and Clara Ahn, parfs of Lote 1228 and 1229, Circleville. $1,700. Samuel Boggs and wife to H. F. Pace, 250 acres, Pickaway township, $12,000. Peter Wolf and wife to Henry Pfen nig, (0 acres and lua poles, washing- ton township, quit claim, jioo au. . James T. Wallace, Sheriff, to Henry Pfennig, 70 acres and 102 poles, Washington township, $2,366 35. Albert Hedges and wife to Sarah M. Moore, Lot 4, Ashville, $S5. Albert J. Grigsby, Assignee of John T. Ruth, to Samuel Hall and John R. Vanmeter, 161 acres, Scioto township, $7,500. jr - Henry Whiteman to Nancy M. To bias, Lot 23, East Ringgold, $300. Samuel W. Miller, Guardian, to M. C. Millar, 67J acres, Scioto township, $1,345. George W. Wilson to John M. Cline, 30J acres, Walnut township, $l,buu. I. N. Abernethy and wife to Frank Fuller, Lot 1479, Circleville, $275. James Baggs to Nancy E. Troutman, 40 poles, Five Points, $150. J. H. Simmons, United States Mar shal, to George W. Roby, "66 acre and 117 poles, Jackson township, $11,000. Cookery and Poetic Jingles. In Kansas City, Mrs. Emma Ewing has been lecturing on Monday after noons on llow to Make Bread. Her lectures are under the auspices of the ladies of Calvary Baptist Church, and this is their very fetching rhymed invitation : 'Tis love," they say, "that makes this - globe Go round without confusion." But Mrs. Ewing says she's reached A different conclusion : Namely, ;hat we are, all of us, Poor rrs -arable sinners, nd will not help the world go round Without delicious dinners. And surely those of us who're blest With husbands, and can lead them, Know that the kay to our success, Is in the way we feed them. So take the hint, and, though you're sweet And wise and pretty looking Come up to Calvary Baptist Church, And learn the art of cooking. current'items. Iceland's geyserB are nearly spent. A return of black ulsters is menaced. Ten ordinary eggs will weigh a pound. The "hypodermic blush" lasts two hours. The Panama canal "has been aban doned for good." Petroleum bas been struck at Lake Athabasca, Can. The demi-train street dress is to be revived, it is said. The Yosemite Valley has had 3,200 visitors this season. Black and red feathered fowls are al ways the best eating. A Californian makes a business of raising halt Dreed Duttaioes. The sixteenth century may be called the "Golden Age" of tapestry. Wvoming's soda deposits have been sold to a $2,000,000 foreign syndicate. California has received $30,000,000 from its green fruit trade this season. Twenty million acres of the land of the United States are held byforeigners. The army of "social spongers are those who always go but are neverreceived. The Texas cotton crop is estimated at 1,850,000 bales, the biggest in the history of the State. Adam Monts. of Bigby Fork, Miss., who is ninety-four years of age, has 400 descendants living. One Colorado county has 100 artesian wells. New ones do not decrease the flow of the old ones. The wife of Ex Governor St. John, of Kansas, is drawing large audiences in the West as a lecturer. x A circular mass of pink and white chrysanthemums makes a popular table decoration of the season. The Catskills are presenting a bril liant appearance, as the sun shines up. on their white, wintry mantle. The first and only modern windmill in London is to be seen at work on the top of a warehouse in the City Road, London. Thirty-six years ago the first settler built his house in Omaha, and the Indians reluctantly fell back a few miles to the west. The Austrian minister of public in struction requests masters of public schools to cultivate a taste for athletics among their boys. Two of the albums sent to the inter national exhibition of postage) stamps at Vienna, were insured for 2,590 and 3,000 respectively. The number of women who avail themselves of the co educational privileges offered by Michigan University is constantly increasing. Half a dozen New York ladies are said to earn a handsome living by hold ing conversation classes and giving pri vate lessons in that art. A sensation in New York recently was a handsome turnout drawn by two well groomed mules, driven by a handsome liveried coachman. There are now four widows of Su preme Court Justices living in Washington, Mrs. Waite, Mrs. Wood, Mrs. Stanley Matthews and Mrs. Miller. A young girl rode her horse through a store door at Lynchburg, Va., the other afternoon, made her purchase, said good-by and backed gracefully out. The average duration of life is great er in Norway than in any other coun try in Europe, lhis is attributed to the uniform cool temperature of the climate. A drainage and plumbing bill of $150,- 000 is large for one individual to settle, but the auke of irortland has recently completed improvements to that amount. Iron collars for heavy work horses are coming into use. They weigh less than seven pounds, and the advantage of their use is said to be immunity from sore necks. There are men and men, as there are sandwiches and sandwiches. There is nothing in some ol them, and in others the more there is so much the worse. Boston Transcript. The Bellefontaine Examiner says : The prominence given by the press of the country to base ball and the dead-beats who play it, is simply disgusting to intelligent readers. The Indianian who got a pension for nervous shock, due to "stopping a cannon ball with his abdomen,' is to be congratulated that the shock left him a fair supply of nerve. During the last fifteen years the en. rolled military force of the leading European nations has doubled. There are now 11,000 000 men in Europe ready to be called into the field. Brazil is larger than the United States, but in the whole twenty states which make up the republic there are not as many people as we have in New York and Pennsylvania. The number of immigrants who arrived in the United States at the six principal ports during the ten months ending October 31 last, was 427,666, against 378,140 during the same period of 1889. The yield of corn in Southern Indiana is said to be much better than had been anticipated, with the best river bottom lands showing crops running as high as sixty bushels per acre, the quality being excellent Spring Grove, York county, Pa., is a musical town, with a population ot 600 to 700, there are in the town five pianos, thirty-three orgaDS, two brass bands nd an orchestra, besides numberless small musical instruments. Senator Hearst's gold mine is the largest in a group of mines near Dead, wood, South Dakota, and is said to be th richest mine in the world. Three thousand miners are employed upon it, and they take out from $150,000 to $200,000 every month. Of eighty-five Irish members of Parliament no less than twenty six have been imprisoned for political offenses. The Lord Mayor of Dublin, the Mayor of Cork, the Mayor of Clonmel and the Mayor of Sligo are among the number of distinguished prisoners. The Salvation Army has made an important capture in Baroness Margaret of Lilienkruz, who has enrolled herself in Berlin and is already in active ser vice, fche is a woman i means who became disgusted with t!o s bsms and shitiV-Tr-. I '. Hfe, nnd hen" - .Lout Lc.;..h" ntll; A l .... i.iU..b lVyift.

W-0'iBiniinMiiiiitiwnpwwMwwwBMWMMeawKiw- JLLjmmmmammimmw im m i wun nwwm , , n n i iMj h i m m i imniiiiiiiiimi wiiiiimwiiiimiiiimiii iiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiwwiii 1111 miiiimiiiiiiimiiwiiiiimiii in i i n nimi m i i i i 11 m n in itit r "'HriT'iii nr r irrr i t I -: " r RATES OF ADVERTISING Onesqrtare, three insertions............. 92 00 bach bobseqnent Insertion, per square......... ou One square, three monthB 4 00 One square, six months ............... 6 00 One sartaro.one year .. . 10 00 One-eighth colnmn, three months 8 00 One-eighth column, six montns w iu One-eighth colnmn, one year . 20 00 One-fourth column, three months...- 12 00 One-fourth column, six months 18 CO Ono-fourth column, one year 30 00 Half-column, six months .'. 30 00 Half -column, one year . 60 W. One column, one year ........ ltO 00 Business cards, 6 Hues or less, 1 year......-. 6 CO S"The above rates will be strictly adhered to TERMS : VOL. LIV, NO. 24-WHOLE NO. 2783. Ingle Subscription. In advance.... tt Uiubs ...., ft hi) 1 fc. CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1890. NEW SERIES-VOL. 29, NO. 1483. Democrat ana watchman. jl u s jl w , ,A , . fij II r II S I S Pi I P !Pl r 111 II I H HIT I fllH M 1 1 n i l Mil Orcein Wagnar's Block, East Main Street v V S U ftwanati & Muskingum Valley fiail-way Company. H KFFKCT NOV. 23, 1890. Trains loava Oirc'eviUe on Central Tims, EASTWARD. No. 20. flinoinuatL... ......., Morrow.. Wilminfrtno Sa'v)ina. Vt'ash'n O.H , New Ro'.lend ClaOLB 7 Lancaster Janct'n City ..... N. Lexington , Pntn.vn vinnsr:He...... Trinway. ......... Oonnis m 8 cen ban viile. Pittsburgh..-. B-iitimore ..........., Philadelphia New York No. . No. U. 8.20 J 11.16 a.m 4 30p.m 7.06 - 12.55 p.m 5 45 7 50 - 1.88 s 93 . 8 11 - 2 02 . U6 8 3- 2.'i5 . 7.08 ! 8 .53 2 47 7 26 9.23 - .2J - 8.05 , ( 10.15 4.16 ; 10 44 - 4.45 ' 10.63 - 4.55 . ! 11.40 . 6 46 . : 11.61 . 6 00 12 27 p.m .3-2.45 . - i 4.20 12.34 ir, : 6.66 . 2.au , 6.15 a.m 1 dp.m 8.25 . i.w ' 8-00 I 4.00 airl: Wa -ft" 0. H. with 1. T. W. vr . ia . w n i ra. ' !hinirton O. H. with D. T. t.r titt, nL -SXtnern trains north; at Laacas-A'.L ",rt 3r Vallev trains south: and Jnnat. with T trains nortb ; at New Lxlnton ritb O. O. train for Ooralng; and at Triuway a V O. trains for Objvelacd. . 20 connects at Oircleviile with 3. V. trains .tftHd from Ooiumbnc. WKSTWARD. !H-w York Philadelphia. - ."Baltimore .. "Pittsburgh.-. StcobeuTiUe. rnTiison -... Trinway...-. , iaee villa. .-.... ...... PnMhnn N. Lexington Junct'n City LanoaHter ... OIBOLB V Hew Holland.... Wash'n O.H SaMna Wilmington U rrow ..... . Olucinnati No.T. 6-Sf'p.m I 8.45 i 7 25 a.m ! 9.04 ,11.00-' 1.20pm i 2.05 . ! 2.09 ! 2 67 - , 3.86 ! 3.46 . 4.27 : 4.68 ! 6.17 - , 5.87 1 01 6.40 7.56 . No. 19. S.TOa.m IV 25 R.45 7.08 7.30 8.10 9.46 No.ll. 4.S5p.m 4.33 - 6.15a. "eio" 7.35 . 7.40 . 8.28 . 8.37 . 9.15 . 10.C6 . 10.45 . 11.07 . 11.30 . 11.55 . 12.35 p.l 2.2.0 . Connections : No. 11 at New Lexington with T. O. 0. trains for Corning ; at Junct. Cilv with B. O. trains north and south ; at Tjancaster with O. H. V. T. trin north and south; at Washington C, H. with Ohio Southern trains south. Ko. t at Junct. City with B. It 0. trains south; at Brensen with T. A O. O. train north ; at Lancaster with trdlu north and south; at Washington G. H. with D. V. W. & 0. train for Wellston ; at Cincinnati with train for Chicago and L. A N. trains for the South . No 19 at Washington 0. H. with D. T. W. A 0. and Ohio Southern trains north, and at Morrow with L. M train No. 10 for the east. F. M. WILKINSON, Oon. Pass. Agent, 0. H. WALTON, Supt., Zanesville, O. Eanesvillt. 0. H. B. MORRIS, Circleville Agent. NORFOLK &. WESTERN (Scioto Valley Division ) LOCAL IX EFFECT JUNE IS, 1890. ATTORNEYS. J. WHEELER LOWE, ATTORNKT-AT-LAW. Office in Van Heyde's Block. Court Street, Circleville, Ohio. Jnne 21 139. J. W. HARSHA, ATTOBN 1 Y-AT-LA W, Odd Fellows Block, CIBCLKVILLE, OHIO. JOHN SOHLEYER, A TTOBNBT-AT-LAW, CIBCLKVILLE, O. Of-xx fee. Booms 14 and 16, Masonic Temple. LEE M. HAMMEL, A TTOBNET-AT-LAW. Office in Boom over Wallace's Dry Goods Store, OIBCLKVILLK O Nov. 19, 1888. ADOLPH GOLD FREDRICK. ATTOBNBT AT LAW, Masonio Temple, Circle-villa, Ohio. CLARENCE CURTAIN, TTOBNET-AT-LAW, Olroleville, Ohio. Offloe jT3l in Odd Follows' Blook, HILT KOBBIS. SMITH & MORRIS, ATTOBNSYS-AT-L AW.OiroleTille, Ohio, in Masonic Temple. OOm SAMUEt. W. COTJRTRIQET, (Lt Judge of the Court of Common PIom,) 4 TTORNET-AT-LAW, Oirolevllle. Ohio. OMoe In Occrtright'a new block. OonrtstrMt, north of Min. X. K. A UtiNKTHT. HKHRT . FOLSOM . ABSRNETHY & FOLSOM, A TTOBNVS-AT-LAW,Oireiville,Ohio. Ofllee XX. in Old Masonio Block, formerly occupied by H. F. Page. J. P. WINSTEAD, A TTOKNHT-AT-LAW AND NOTARY PTTBLIO, jTV Circleville, Ohio. Oftioe in Odd Fellows' building, second storv, corner room. PHYSICIANS. CHARLES NATJMANN, (H0M(EOPATHIST.) PHYSICIAN AND 8UBG1C0N. Office in tha Nightingale Block, opposite Oonrt House, Oir-oleville, Ohio, GEORGE T. ROW, PHYSICIAN AND SI7BGX0N. Office and res idence, Bast Main street, first door east of Harsha's Marble Works, Circleville, Ohio. ' WILDER & BOWERS, PHYSICIANS AND STJBGEONS. OScein Peok Block. Kn trance on Court street, in rear of Evans A Krimmel's. A. W. THOMPSON. T. J. WBIOHT THOMPSON fc WRIGHT, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Lnng and other chest diseases a specialty. Pneumatic cabinet sittings from 10 to 11 a. n . and 1 to 2 p. h. except Sunday. Office on. Court street, one door north of City Building. Dsmocut ami Watchman. Is a constitutional and not a local disease, and therefore It cannot be cured by local applications. It requires a constitutional remedy like Hood's Sarsaparilla, which, working through the blood, eradicates the Impurity which causes and promotes the disease, and effects a permanant cure. Thousands of people testify to the success of Hood's Sarsaparilla as a remedy for catarrh when other preparations had failed. Hood's Sarsaparilla also builds up the whole system, and makes you feel renewed in health and strength. N. B. If you decide to try Hood's Sarsaparilla do not be induced to buy any other. " I used Hood's Sarsaparilla for catarrh, and received great relief and benefit from it The catarrh was very disagreeable, causing constant discharge from my nose, ringlnj noises in my ears, and pains in the back ol my head. The effect to clear my head in thf morning by hawking and spitting was pain ful. Hood's Sarsaparilla gave me relief to mediately, while in time I was entireli cured. I think Hood's Sarsaparilla is wortl its weight in gold." Mrs. G. B. Gibb, 1021 Eighth Street, N.W., Washington, D. C. "Hood's Sarsaparilla has helped me mort for catarrh and impure blood than anythini else I ever used." A. Ball, Syracuse, N. Y, Sold by druggists. 01; six for $6. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. lOO Doses One Dollar arsaparilla Gov. Hoard, of Wisconsin, as soon as be turns over his office to Gov.-elect Peck, will speak in several States on dairy topics. This may or may not include an explanation of the milk in the political cocoanut, which in some cases is found to be quite sour. There will be one colored Represen tative in the new Congress just elected and none in the Senate. H. P. Cheatham is re-elected by 1,240 majority in the Second North Carolina district, and the only Republican in the delegation. Cheatham is a bright mulatto, a college graduate and one of the most respected men of his race. Sold by druggists. $1 ; six for g5. Prepared only by U. I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar SHE WAS POISONED! A. P- OOURTRIGHT, J3HYSI0IAN AND SURGEON, Circleville, Ohio. E. A. VAN RIPER, FEMALE PHYSICIAN. I am prepared to treat all of the diseases pertaining to the human sys tem. Obstetrics a specialty. Office and residence. fourth house east of Farmers' Exchange Mill, Oircleviile. 0. March 16, 1888. G. W. BUTLER, Veterinary Surgeon. OFFICII. Residence and Stable, corner Court and Hieh Streets, CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO. Telephone No. 63. TRAINS GOING SOUTH. STATION'S. No. 2. ; No. 4. fcc. Oolan.bns. Lv. 7.35 a.m 12.10 p.nj 5. 50 p.m Infirmary " 12 24 ' 6 04 " Valley Crossing. ' 7,63 " 12,29 " 6 09 - Reese's " 7.66 " 12.32 " 6 12 - Lockbonrne ' 8 03 " 12.39 " 6.19 - Duvall's.- " 8.09 12.46 ' 6.25 - Ashville " 8.16 " 12.52 " 6.32 - Olroleville. ......... 8.33 " l.U " 6 51 - Hayosvillo " " 1.29 " 7.00 Klmwod " 1.2S " 7.06 - Kingston.......... 8 50 " 1 30 " 7.10 - Kinnikinnick 8.50 " 138 7.18 - Hopetown " 1 45 ' 7,25 " Ar. vbilltooih " 911 " 1.55 ' 7,ai - Lv. Chillicothe " 9.12 " 1.58 7.40 .. Three Locks " 2.07 " ... Hlgby'i 9-32 ' 2.20 haron...... " 9.39 " 2.28 " Waverly " 9.47 ' 2 37 " 8.14 ). S. Crossing .... " 9.43 " 2 39 " 8J5 - r.'iketon.. ' 9.59 " 2 49 8.25 TBig Run. ..... " 10.11 3.03 " ;joheon's .... " 10.18 " 810 " LucasviUe " 10 25 " 3.18 " 8.40 " iOavis ' i.26 Portsmouth ..." 1045 ' 3,48 " OS O. N.W. Depot 10 47 3,42 " 9.07 - i ,eiotovi!le . " 1100 S.56 ' Wueelemburg 1 1 05 4.01 " (Tratklio Furnace.. " H.15 " 4.12 " :Ha?orb.ill " 11.21 " '.20 " Bantrinfr Bock " H SO 4.30 Ironton. " 11.40 " 4 42 9 55 - Petersburg " 11.60 6 00 " 10.05 - A.0.4 1Janctid.Ar. 12t0p.a 6.f0 10.25 - YafcWnd 12.20 " 5.30 " 10.35 - Trains Nos. 2 and 0 dally. Trin !o. 4 dniW. excent Snndav. At stations where time is omitted, trains do not ton. Through Cars. All Columbus and Ashland trains ars tbrouarh without chance. No. 2 has Pullman Palw Sl-cniig and Reclining Chair Car Chicago to Aahland via Chicago atlhti-, Columbus Hocking Valley Toledo and 8cioto Valley Rallwoys . TRAINS GOING NORTH. spf atiohs. No, 1. No. 3. No. S. Ashlard Lv. S.30a.m S.00 a.m 4.30p.m A. 0. ; I. Junction. " 3 40 D.10 " 4,4ii " Peterbcrg 40fl - 9 30 " 500 !ro.ton " 4.10 - 3.40 - 5.10 - Hanging Book ... " 4 17 - 9.50 " 5.20 - Kavstb.ll .. " 10.01 - 5.30 - J ranklin Furnace. " 10.09 5.36 Wneelersburg . " 10.20 - 5.45 - intotoville " 4.45 - 10.25 " 5.50 - Oi S.W. Depot.- " 4.58 - 10.38 - 6.03 - J-orMmouth ." 6.00 10.45 - 6.0S - Davis 10.68 - lMCaville M9 11.05 - 6.25 - Johnson's. " 11.12 - 6.32 - (.ig Hun " ft 31 11,19 6.38 - PiW-tcn " 6.2 11.83 " 6.61 - O. S. Crossing .. " 5-61 " 11.43 - 7.00 Waverly 6.S3 11.45 - 7.02 - Sharon . " 6 01 " 11.64 - 7.10 - Kigby'B 6.08 - l?.03S.m 7.18 - Three Locks " 1214 " Ar. Oai'.Hoothe " 6 30 " 12 25 - 7.40 - Lv. Chillicothe " 6 50 " 13.45 " 7.50 - H.netown " 6 59 - 12.55 - - Kinnikinnick " 7 05 - i.tq - 8.05 - Kingston " 7 12 - l.ln - 8.11 - Elmwood " T.'T " 1.14 - . Hi.y.rfUe " 7.22 - 1.20 Circleville... '!t' " 1.27 - 8. SO - Ashville , " 7.60 1.46 - 8.49 - Dnvall's 7.67 1.53 - lockbonrne. " 8.03 " 1.59 9.00 - r-eese's " S.09 2.06 9.07 - V liy Crossing. ... ' S12 - 2.09 9.10 - Inftrsnsry " S-17 - 2 '5 - 0ium!ios Ar. S.30 - 2.30 - 9.30 - Trains Nos . 1 and 6 daily. rv:in S). 3 daily, except Sunday. Train So. 1 takes breakfast at Chillicothe. Tr:tii rlo. 3 tuses Dinner at Obiliiuothe. Ar. stHcions whore time is emitted trains do not ton Through Oars. ill Ashland and Colnmbns trains ar thronch wiihout change. No 5 has Pulluis Pa'ice Sleeping and Reclining Chair Car Ashlam to 'hicio via Scioto Valley, ..lnmbns H.ickingVal ley & Toledo ana .Thicag s Atlantic Kalways. Coupon Tloltots By . he Best Routes and to al! principal points i the United States and Canada, can De found at the following Stations C0LU8US, CHILLI "OTHE, IRONTON CiFJCLEViLLE, WAVERLY.A. C. & I. Jc KINGSTON, PORTSMOUTH, ASHL NO for further; nfoTmatioR relative to rftt. connec- Honsaua taronu .im.calion yoar licfc-et Agent, or vaareiia( , ISO. J. ARCHER, J. ROBINSON, G,P.$T. Ag't. Gm'l Supt. COLUMBCS, OHIO. Not by anything she drank or took, but -y luitl !o;!. Irs it any wonder she eels "blue" in most oases blues are rJy another name for bad blood. A man r woman feels uuhar.pv. Life seems ark. Tna hears U 1m?'.t- Bnl blood is irrying it3 pobon all orer ihu body, and a ca.il it " bices." ih'&i ib.n.ie experiences : Mis. C. C. iJutcbinson, of Pittston, Pa., ivs : " I consider Dr. Acker's English -iood Eiixir tiie best medicine in the vovld, not only for blood troubles, but Jso for dyspepsia, with, which I have oen aitneted. Both my wife and mvself firmlv be- ievet'nat Di Anker's English Blood Elixir ti the best of all blood medicines, and will -emo"8 all impurities of the blood." (iEO. V. fetJGiER, Vauey City, Dak. This grand Elixir is sold by druggists in all parts oi America, it is a pure, honest medicine ; not a cheap sarsapa- LUa. Try it to-day. GIRARD WILLIAMS, Civil Engineer and Surveyor. Farm Drainage a -specialty. OFFICE : 0. A. Clark's Drugstore, Wit. STERLING, O. BfitlTSVS For LOST or FAILING MANHOOD; HrlllCS General and NERVOUS DEBILITY: fTTT? "F1 'Weakness of Body and Mind: Effects V aJ JLvJU of Errors or Excesses in Old or Young, BobnBt. Noble HAMIOOD TqIIt RMtorrd. How to Enlarro ind Strengthen UrKAK.l'MieVRLOT'KI) ORGANS 1'A RT8 of BOnY. Absolutt7 unfalllnr HOMS THKATHBST Bt-n.SU la a day. men tesliry rrora SI stxtel, lrntortea, ana foreign t,ontrles. os can write taem. Book, fall explanation, and proofa mailed lHaled) free. Address ERIE MEDICAL .0., BUFFALO, N. Y. E. J. LILLY., M. D. DENTIST, OFFICE IN W1TTICH S NEW BLOCK CIRCLEVILLE 0., A. M. ABEENATHY, u. AUTHORIZED S. Pension & Claim Att'v, j FIVE POINTS, OHIO, Presents and pro8eutes all claaacs of claimi for PAnaiona.UT.dAr both the new and old. New. In crease and RjN:ted Claims a specialty. Back pay and bounty claims collected. No fee in any Pension claim unless sncceinful. Many are entitled to peniions who bare never applied. Thousands ate entitled to an increase of pension, and would get it were thf ir claims put in proper shape. Oonsultation fren. Correspondence srltcitMl. Ad- dress A. M. ABERMATHY. Box l and 2. Five Points, Ohio. Aug 22, 180O-6sa. lLBAUG k LMi UNDERTAKERS! We have a complete stock of Under .iking Goods, from the finest to thf oiv-ost, and our prices are reasonable SVe Make a Specially of Embalming wiihout Extra Charge, We have the Boyd Burglar Grrave Vault. Proof We Make NO EXTRA CHARGE for Hearse feervices. Witt thanks for past patronage, we ..elicit a snare oi tiie same in the fu '.are. Albaugh 8z Lanum To ours B'lionsness, Sick Headache, Constl-pa'.ion, M.'thiri.i, Liver Complaints, take tha saio and certnin remedy, Ft ? Rp 1 13 ar Lea t T3 the S?I All. Size ffOUttle Beans to the bvulz). Thev Auii rnr; aor co.svbn"'nt. BuitAile tor I A iJLf5. Prl?J (' eitd?r sie, USc. per Tiottle. 'fHHTCaslVi'Rt 1 PAN v-x, 6IZS. fcf ri'rtrt or sUnt J.F.SiKiIHaC(i.-Makerot"i'.li.miSAXS, 'ST.iOil!S (.10. rrVk fclkSSbJtSi SJ S-M Malie ! for IrU. e LiYery. Sals asi'M Stable rTlHS undersigned wonld inform the pubilctha JL ne is prepared to lurnisa them with Horses, Buggies, Carriages On Reasonable Terms, at tbeoM stand on Franklin Street, where citizens and strangers can be accommodated at all hoars of dav and nivht. Horses boarded by the day or week at reasonable terms. the patronage oi tbepubliois respectfully solicited W. H- ALBATJGH. OILY! ITTInE i PSLLS. ERS . SIckHeaaacheaitii i -.'licve all tlie troubles incident to a bilious stttre of the systein, such as Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness. Distress after eating. Pain in the Sido. &c. While their inogt remarkable success has been shown in curing Headache, yet Carteu's Little Liver PLta are equally valuable iu Constipation, curing and preventing this aitnoTing complaint, "while they also correct all disorders of tiie st;.macr stimulate the livor and regulate ihe bowel. JLvea if they only cured 33 t.-2S fg& Ache thy would he almost Trice.css to tbosa who suffer from this distressing- comlainc; but fortunately their goodnesi does not nd here, ana thoo who once tr nit-m win mid these little pills valuable in so many ways that they will not be willing to do without ths.a. But after all sick head in the bane of so rqauv lives that Tiere la where we make our greiit boast. Our pills cure at while others do not. Carter's Little Liver Pitas are very snw. and very easy to take. One or two pills ntakt a dose. They are sfrietly vp.'tal!le and not jrripe or v'e, but by their ci-ntle action please all who use thtin. In vials at 25 cent five for $1 . Sold everywhere, or Pent by mai CAETE2 fcEMCUfa C0.( w Tori. REMARKABLE RESCUE. : Mrs. Michael Curtain, Plninfield, Illinois, makes tbe statement that she caught cold, which settled on her luncrs; she was treated for a month by the family physician, but she gre.y worse. He told her ;he was a tope- less victim oi consumption and that no medicine could cure her. Rer druggist suggested Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption ; she bought a bottle and to her delight found herself benefited from the first dose. She continued its use and after taking ten bottles, found herself sound and well, now docs her own housework and is as well as she ever was. Free trial bottles of this Great Discovery at Evans & Krimmel's drug store, large bottles 50c. and $1. HAPPY HOOSIERS. Wm. Timmons, Postmaster of Idaville, Ind., writes: '-Electric Bitters has done mors! for me than all other medicines combined, for that bad feeling arising from kidney and liver trouble." John Leslie, farmer and stockman, of same place, says: " Find Electric Bitters to be the best kidney and liver medicine, made me feel like a new man." J. W. Gardner, hardware merchant, same town, says: Electric Bitters is just the thing for a man who is all run down and don't care whether be lives or dies : he found new strength, good appetite, and felt just like he had a new lease on life. Only 50c. a bot tie, at Evans & Krimmel's drug store. Arabian Oil the marvelous healer and pain enre. IS LIFE WORTH LIVING? Not if you go through the world a dyspeptic. Dr. Acksr's Dyspepsia Tablets are a positive cure :or tbe worst forms of dyspepsia, indigestion, flitnleney and constipation Guaranteed and sold by J. G. Wilder, drug gist. Arabian Oil, the best stock liniment in the world. Catarrh 5S a blood disease. Until trie poison is expelled from the system, there car be no cure for this loathsome' and. dangerous malady. Therefore, the only effective treatment is a thorough course of Ayer's Sarsaparilla the best of all blood purifiers. The sooner you begin the better ; delay is dangerous. " I was troubled with catarrh for over two years.- I tried various remedies, and was treated by a number of physicians, but received no benefit until I bejiau to take Ayer's Sarsaparilla. A few boti it s of this medicine cured lne of this troublesome complaint and completely restored my health." Jesse M. Boggs, Holman's Mills, N. C. ""When Ayer's Sarsaparilla was recommended to ine for catarrh, I was in-clitiru to doubt its efficacy. Having tried so many remedies, with little benefit, I had no faith that anything -would cure me. I became emaciated from loss of appetite and impaired digestion. I had nearly lost the sense of smell, Rnd my system was badly deranfred. I was about discouraged, when a friend urged me to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and referred me to persons whom it had cured of catarrh. After taking half a dozen bottles of this medicine, I am convinced that the only sure way of treating this obstinate disease is through the blood." Charles H. Maloney, 113 ltiver St., Lowell, Mass. yer's Sarsaparilla, PREPARVD BT Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Price $1; six bottles, $5 Mass. Worth $5 a bottle. Oae hundred dolhrs for a case of scratches Arabian 0.1 will not cure. A DUTY TO YOURS riLF. Ii is surprising that people will use a com uou. orJinary oill when they can secure.a r-iiia'e. English one tor the same money D. Ac-feer's English Pills are a positive cure ' r sick headache aad all liver troubles, Ttiey are small, sweet, easily taken and do act gripe. J. G. Wilder, druggist, EL Tills "s ratio ( Mark Is on J THe Best CoHt In the world. jla Livery, Sale asi Feel Mc Li I PACKAGE PRQF.HARRJS'g arm FOR THE CURE OF VITALLY WSASO, Madias by too close application to instuess or BtmW: severe nwuta! stmiu or grief; SKXl'AL CXCKSSKSiu ir.td'Uelire.or vicious habits wmmrted in vnuin. HEMt MB! n TMTiasio ni ttvjis iM.mi.ny ,.r OtUSTAKY 10SSKS KARLV 11 1 AV In Tot r.U and J11U- LE A0K0; lacb of vlo, vigor, niul strength, ithfrjriiai organs mpnfreil and weakened pi imntHrpiy in :tipro:icliln;x old nge. flfHEH m SAY CynEoTVKtvViirsl-rl a maDT thoimnd cses trenteduud cured pat twelve years, " 1 . r..:.i. :n T, tt ' 1SS SOLTTflli! MirDT.0ATEDPaSTrLL23 jnisi we offer e.sht nays trial i. ..ttl.t i LI.Y FK1.B. " " "All men, voi.nij or clil, suffering from this prevalent tio. e should send their -id.trcs so woean furhlsh luestiou4 tobeuaswered, th:it -v? luay kuor tlie tri'e condition Meaehcase and pjeparo mwlicire to effect a prompt cure. iocaiea 1DJ.CW inrsini.ri . i.;.. a. i.euts,, we oner ill a chance to be cured or the celehrated Pabtille Treatment. THE HARRIS RiMSDY CC, Wlf. Chemists. 89 BEEKUAN STUS l'. NEW YORK. The reaotion in favor of a licensed liquor traffic, as shown in the local elections in Massachusetts, is crediia ble to the good sense and honesty of the voters. Prohibition is hypocrisy. It does not 'stop liquor selling nor liquor-drinking It only adds deceit, lying and law-breaking to the inevita ble evils of ..the traffic. And it interferes with personal liberty in a most offensive and unjustifiable manner. Massachusetts is growing away from bigotry and Pharisaism. The Russian exports of carpet wools to this country have been seriously ob structed by the McKinley Tariff act. But what do the sheep-raisers of this country gain by prohibiting a class of wool which they do not produce ? All that the duty on carpet wool accomplishes is an increase in the cost of carpets, a diminution in consumption of carpets, and a consequent loss of employment to carpet weavers. But we are told to wait patiently and see the beneficent results of the McKinleytariff. Workingmen who stop occasionally to think, in the drudgery of their daily grind, will be apt to ask themselves if their wages have not been lowered by the operation of the McKinley tariff. The prices of commodities having been advanced, unless wages shall be ad vanced in like ratio the effect will be tantamount to a reduction of wages commensurate with the increased cost of living. The workman who earns $2 per day, and who has to pay more for his clothing and other necessary purchases, will find that his $2 has shrunk in its ability to help him care for his family and himself. Unless those producers who advance the prices of their goods shall simultaneously advance the pay of their employes, and unless all consumers shall find from some source additional income enough to meet ad ditional expenditure, the increased tariff will only operate to add to the profits of a few persons at the expense of everybody else. Gordon and Pugh. The Philadelphia Times, 28th ult,, says : The re-election of Senator Pugh, of Alabama, like General Gordon's elec tion in Georgia, is a notable triumph of honest character and sound cpnserva tism. It is another proof that the Farmers' Alliance, though important and powerful, is not the revolutionary or ganization tnat many timid persons have supposed. Mr. Pugh is respected by the farmers as by all the people of Alabama, but like General Gordon, he refused to commit himself to the wild schemes that some of them proposed, and there was an earnest movement against him. But his personal strength withstood at tack and little by litte the opposition weakened, till yesterday the Legislature chose him for another term. He is a man of high character, of sound knowledge and of ripe experi ence, and his defeat would have been a loss to Alabama and to the Senate. out an attempt to overturn the most magnificent and creditable thing in Indiana's history our boss-proof,corruption-proof election law the working- man's protection and shield against the oppression of employers and the control of the rich, and the honest man's chance." The Norfolk and Western Railroad will build a line from Riverton, Va., on the Shenandoah Valley, recently purchased by the Norfolk and Western, to Washington, D. C, a distance of 70 miles. The Shenandoah Valley will hereafter be known as the Maryland and Washington Division of the Norfolk aud Western. There can be no doubt that Mr.Blaine is "in the field" for 1892. The careful Washingiou correspondent of the Bos ton Journal says there are indications that Secretary Blaine is not averse to the circulation of the report that he is a candidate for the Presidency. This is truly a very open secret. The dispo sition to drop President Harrison is no longer disguised, even by leading Republicans, usually politic. "Once is enough for him." Wages and Tariffs. The notion that high wages depend upon or result from high tariffs will be thoroughly exploded by the McKinley Act, says the New York World. The new law advanced duti s 33 per cent. There has been no advance in wages in protected industries. On the contrary, the tendency is towards a decline. The total average percentage of labor cost in manufactured articles is not over 20 per cent. Yet Mr. M.Kinley's subser vient followers gave the manufacturers an average duty of 60 per cent upon the transparently false pretense of "protecting American labor." They re jected all propositions to imbed in the law a provision giving to labor in increased wages the difference between the selling price of protected American products and of imported competing articles. A high duty may enable a pro tected manufacturer to pay higher wages if he is willing to forego "living like a prince" and heaping up a big for tune. But there is nothing in the law to compel or restrain him to do so. A high tariff does not produce high wages, but it does add to the cost of living to every workingman in the country. , At the Turn of the Road. Oliver Wendell Homes, in the Atlantic. The glory has passed from the golden- rod s plume, The purple hued asters still linger in bloom ; The birch is bright yellow, the sumachs are red. The maples like torches aflame over head. But what if the joy of the Summer is past, And Winter's wild herald is blowing Ms Dlast l For me dull November is sweeter than May, For my love is its sunshine she meets me to day ! Will she come ? Will the ring-dove re turn to her nest ? Will the needle swing back from the east or the west I At the stroke of the hour she will be at her gate : A friend may prove laggard love nev er comes late. Do I see her afar in the distance ? Not yet. Too early 1 Too early ! She could not forget! When I cross the old bridge where the brook overflowed She will flash full in sight at the turn of the road. I pass the low wall where the ivy en twines ; I try the brown pathway that leads through the pines : I haste by the boulder that lies in the field, Where her promise at parting was lov ingly sealed. Will she come by the hillside or round through the wood I Will she wear her brown dress or her mantle and hood ? The minute draws near but her watch may go wrong ; My heart will be asking : What keeps her so long I Why doubt for a moment? More shame if 1 do I Why question ? Why tremble ? Are angels mora true ? She would come to the lover who calls her his own Though she trod in the track of a whirl ing cyclone ! I crossed the old bridge ere the minute had passed. I looked ; lo ! my love stood before me at last. Her eyes, how they sparkled, her cheeks, how they glowed, As we met, face to face, at the turn of the road ! The riht way to cure catarrh is to eradi cite the poisonous taint which causes the disease, by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. WE CAN AND DO Goarantee Dr. Acker's Blood Elixir, for it has been tully demonstrated to tbe people oi this country that it is superior to ail other preparations tor blood diseases. It is a pos ltive cure for syphilitic poisoning, ulcers, eruptions and pimples. It purifies tbe whol rystftui and thoroughly builds up the consti tution. J. G. Wildbe, druggist. Don't I If a dealer offers you a bottle of Salvation Oil in a mutilated or defaced pack-1 age don't buy it at any price it may be a dangerous and worthless counterfeit. Insist upon getting a perfect, unbroken, genuine package. A CHILD KILLED. Another child killed by the use of opiates given in the lorm of soothing syrup. Why mothers give their children such deadly poison is surprising when they can relieve tbe child of its peculiar troubles by using Dr Acker's Baby Soother It contains no opium or morphine. Sold by J G. Wilder, drug fiist.' To have fine horses use Arabian OU, the horse nervine. The Republican members of Congress who refused to discuss the Mc Kinley tariff bill before its passage, and who compelled a vote upon it before there was an opportunity to digest it, now complain that its provisions were misunderstood by the people when they voted at the recent elec tions. This complaint serves very well in default of any better way of accounting for Republican defeat, says the Philadelphia Record; but there is little doubt that the better the McKinley tariff is understood the more profound will be the popular dislike for it. The demand of the country is for lighter taxes, cheaper living, free raw materials, wider markets. A measure that increases taxation, adds to the cost of living, perpetuates the burden on raw material of manufacture, and narrows the field of commercial activity, offers a stone instead of bread. The people of the United States are neither dolts nor dunderheads. They know what tariff legislation they need, and they have elected Representatives who will carry out their wishes as far as possible. CAN'T SLSEP NIGHTS Is the complaint of thoueend3 suffering from asthma, consumption, coughs, etc. Did yon ever try Dr. Acker's English Remedy? It ie the best preparation known for all lung troubles Sold on a positive guarantee at ZbB. and 50c. J. G Wildkk, druggist. Livery men use Arabian Oil for scratches FULLEH & BALDWIN NEW RESTaUHANT, (B. BECHER'S OLD STAND.) TUB Finest Place in tbeOity. Open day and night. Hps' tr ordtr. Oysters in every style. Game ana Flab iu seaton. Xlie Milliard ftocr at tached bas been renovated and txvtte' trrstiged for visitors. Sit. U, 1098. JOHN-HENRY, (SVOOXSftOft T01TOMR BIN BT,) Setpeotfullytaformi tbe public that be ii prepared to farniih Horses, Buggies, Carriages ON SEASONABLE TKBMS, At the old stand on Franklin Street, where citizens e strangers can be accommodated at all hours of the day or nigat. ilorses boarded by t'.e day or week. The patronage of the public is respectfully solicited. JOHN HENRY. Farm for Rent. Pit 10 miles et of Circlevillo. noor Cllear-pert, O., oontaimni? S3 acres. Will r. nt for cash lant'onlv kof further particulars, rail ..n or ad-dr. M G S- KS" . 7. 1890. Clrolevllw, 0. fR3T8 ENTIRELY VEGETABLE, ThsMnsiEftaciivBBlQcdPuiifierKnoi'n bUAnArtleCtU a disorders! condition of the stomach and liver, unci, an lit liootm-fis, DTsprptia, .... Annol tf.Fiitlriiv-Ui HI nioicwD. m-MUHrutj, 11. Ii- marrhcpn. Lfer (Will.-is t. k Mr?T TntublrR, I JautHllcr, toni.inptlo, Serofuia, iamrri.. Khfuma- tlsm, tfrynlprMRii, bmi itiifBni, rtVtfl ARU HUUCi THE CLARKfi. B. C. tSEGICINE CO., Operative Chemist, Send a&lreei tor or A. Consumption Surely Cured. To Thk Editor: Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above-named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases nave been permanently cured. I shall be triad to send two bottles of my remedy FREE to any of your readers wuo have consumption if they will sena me tneir express ana P. O. address. Respect luuy, x. A. BiiUtJUjB., M. c, 181 Pearl St., H. X Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. Vlvn she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoivtb Ktmn she had Children, she gave them CastotisV Arabian Oil is guaranteed to cure all ail ' raenti of your ito. The ballot reform system worked well at the late election, wherever it was in force, but perhaps the most striking proof of its merit is furnished in Indiana, where the targe Democratic majority shows what can be accom plished in that State by an election en tirely, free from the shameless frauds which have so long corrupted the bal lot box. It was a complete preventive of the blocks of five and other fraudulent Republican schemes, and gave the Democrats the largest majority since the war. As the adoption of the Australian system was wholly the result of Democratic influences, the Indiana Democracy are highly gratified at this verification of their views regarding its value and necessity. The Republican fine workers, on the other hand, are already seeking its repeal, and if there was the slightest prospect of success they would make an attempt at it in the Legislature this winter. The honest Republican sentiment, however, is strongly in favor of the system, and the Indianapolis News warns the' Republican crooks who thrive off political bribery and corruption, in the fol lowing language: "The Republican newspapers of the State that are full ing in line opposing the new election law are piling up a fearful lot of material for use at the next election. The way the people whacked things on "terrible day" won't be a circumstance The Revolution of 1890 From Philadelphia Times (Ind.) The completeness of the popular revolution against the party in power can't be appreciated without analyzing the vote in comparison with the former votes of the revolutionized States. The assumption of the organs of the defeated party that this is an off year and that the vote is light, is ex ploded by the fact that there never was so large a vote polled in any off year in the hibtory of the country, and the Republican vote is obviously diminished not only by stay-at-homes, but by scores of thousands voting the Demo cratic ticket, The Northern States which elected Congressmen Sn tbe 4th of November gave, in round numbers, 410,000 Republican majority for Congress in 1888, and the same States gave, in round numbers, 200,000 Democratic majority in 1890. Of these States only Idaho, Nevada, North Dakota, South Dakota, Ohio and Pennsylvania gave Republi can majorities this year, and four of the six States thus voting elected only five Congressmen. Ohio gave only 11,-000 Republican majority, being about half the full party strength, and Fenn sylvania gave 37,000. The only import- tnt States in the electoral College of the whole North which voted in No vember in favor of the policy of the administration are Pennsylvania and Ohio, and Pennsylvania elected a Dem ocratic Governor and Ohio elected Democratic delegation to Congress. The impressive lesson of the late elections in the election of members of Congress in the North is in the fact that the Northern States which gave 410,000 Republican majority in 1888 gave 200,000 Democratic majority' in 1890; a change of over 600,000 in the popular vote and a change that is a more sweeping revolution tnan Has ever before been accomplished in the history of American politics. Should not these facts teach the party leaders in the present Congress that high taxes bewildering profligacy and the policy of Force must be fatal to any party su premacy? It is simply begging the question to offer the excuse that the eruption of the Farmers' Alliance uprooted parties and caused the revolution. The Far mers' Alliance, the Union Labor, the Wheelmen and all the other forms of organization the revolt assumed, all started on the platform of Tariff Re form, and the reduction of needless taxes was the slogan that inspired them to united effort. The fact that there was not a single Democratic candidate for Congress defeated before the people in a Democratic district by the Far mers' Alliance, or by any of the other anti-tax movements, in either the North or the South, conclusively proves that all these elements are in unity on the vital principle that has called them into organized political action; and that vital principle will force cohesion in one form or another until monopoly taxes are entirely eliminated from our political system And all of these different factors in the late revolution are equally united against national profligacy and against Force legislation of every type. The people who revolt against excessive taxes logically revolt against the profit gate waste of public revenues ; and they as logically revolt against govern ment by force, because such legislation is always revolutionary, demoralizing, and the precursor of national bank ruptcy. In short, there is only one ex plana tion of the revolution that has thrown two-thirds of the Electoral votes of the North against the party of power. It is a revolution against the monopoly greed portrayed in the Mc Kinley tariff; against the profligacy that has caused the first Treasury defi cit since the war, and against the resort to the policy of Force to legalize election frauds and maintain power against the popular will. If the present leaders in Congress don't so under- Ghrismas is Coming-. Oh, how I love my teacher's face, Oh, how 1 love to prav ! Oh, how I love this life of grace ! On, how they II miss me from place Just after Christmas day. New York Herald. this high into the air shovelfuls of grain, straw and chaff, the lighter materials being wafted to one side, while the grain, comparatively clean, would descend and form a heap by itself. In this manner all the grain in California was cleaned. At that day no such thing as a fanning mill had ever been brought to this coast. It is said that the number of deaths from diphtheria and scarlet fever in New York city every year reaches nearly 4,000, and are about equally'divided between the two maladies. The New York Medical Record says this enormous mortality means not less than 20,000 or 30,000 cases of sickness. The banking house of Barker Bros & Co., of Philadelphia, which was forced to close its doors on 20th ult., with lia bilities amounting to $3,000,000, was one of the oldest banking houses in the United States. Abraham Barker, the head of the firm, has been in the banking business for over fifty years. The Columbus Journal says : Twelve years ago General Thomas L. Young retired as Governor of Ohio. He was a favorite in this city. He was the successor of Hayes and predecessor of Bishop. Afterward he held a govern ment appointment and served two years in Congress. He died two years ago while serving as a member of the board of public affairs in Cincinnati. He had held as high a rank as a soldier as he had as a civilian. But it is well known that public life is not a desirable one so tar as providing tor the future of a family is concerned. Mrs. Young, the wid ow of the distinguished general, .Gov ernor and congressman, is now keeping a boarding house in Cincinnati, and compelled to care for herself and family. She has executive ability and is successfully managing her way for the best interests of her children. Only one Republican in the newly elected Legislature of Florida, and he is a hold-over Senator. The House is unanimously Democratic. The National Democrat which was es tablished in Washington one year ago by Edmund Hudson, with the indorse ment of many of the great leaders of the party, has entered upon its second year with a circulation of 40,000 copies each week. This is perhaps the largest circulation ever attained by a week ly newspaper during the first year of its existence. The National Democrat occupies a field of its own, and one that too long remained unfilled. It gives a complete record of political informa tion, including the most important speeches that are delivered by Democratic leaders in Congress and on the stump. It is rendering the party an important service, and should be read by all who wish to keep fully informed in regard to public affairs and who mean to defeat the wicked scheme of the Republican leaders to secure permanent control of the Government, in spite of the fact that they are, and must remain, the minority party in this country. France has raised the tariff on meat foods as follows : On beef from 20 fr. to 25 fr. per double cwt ; on mutton, from 28 francs to 32 francs ; on fresh pork, from 10 francs to 12 francs ; and on salted beef and other salted meats, except pork, from 22 to 27 francs. A franc is 20 cents. This is a part of France's reply to the McKinley bill. That bill helps the American manufacturer and hurts the American farmer; it gouges him in every section and robs him in every paragraph. It strikes at the French manufacturer. France re. plies by striking the American farmer, who is thus made the foot ball of the world. The farmer's great market and his surest one is in the manufacturing countries of Europe. The smaller the tariff tax on European products the better is the farmer's European mar ket Is the American farmer ready to throw away a certain and profitable market for a chance of making one where there is none at present, and for one that will not be of as much benefit after he gets it ? If so let him indorse Blaine's moonshine reciprocity scheme, But before he does this let him read the story of the dog that .dropped his piece of meat to grab the reflection in the water. If the farmer wants to know how much good Blaine's scheme can do him let him try to fatten his stock on pictures of haystacks and keep his family warm with photographs of blankets. 1 LOCAL CORRESPONDENCE. Palestine. (Deferred last week.) Henry T. Reay says there is a Demo cratic majority in his house now, one girl and three boys. The last one shied in his caster last Sunday James E. Campbell, Jr. and all doing well. Mrs. Joe Ketcham came near dying, last Sabbath, not having recovered from her confinement, several weeks ago. ' The lives of at least twelve children were saved, on Sunday night last, in this place. Taylor Heath's . cob shed collapsed, and the children were not under it, as it was in the night time. Rufus Ferrell came back, on Monday night last, to adjust matters at the depot, but went home again, not being able to take charge of the work. Oyster supper at Sallie Richards', in this plaoe, on Saturday night next, the proceeds to be applied to the care ol the church. Charles E. Fetherolf paid a flying visit to his parents, on thanksgiving He is wrapping armatures in the elec tric light works at the Jenrey ilanu facturing Co., of Columbus, O. Stontsvllle. (Deferred last week.l The Sunday Schools of this place, will observe Christmas with appropriate ceremonies. Stephens, the Kentuckian, who has been running Pool's mill, the past two years, removed with his iamiiy, to (Jol-umbus, O., last Monday. Dr. Bradford, of Oakland, has formed partnership with Dr. Huddle, of this place, and will move here this week The indications are that this will make Btrong team. The Women's Missionary Aid supper on Thanksgiving evening, netted them about $25. Dr. Kefauver and Miss Lizzie Baker were married on Wednesday, 3d inst., at 10 a. h. Chas. Stepleton has moved into the property lately vacated by breoree VV. Parks. The Coon Hunter's Syndicate have 18 coon pets caught this winter. On last Friday evening, Peter Good an inoffensive fellow, went into the sa loon of Nicholas Conrad, when upon the slightest provocation he was saulted by the old man Conrad and his son Joe. Good was knocked down with some blunt instrument, supposed to be billy, and badly used up. A war rant was sworn out for their arrest and placed in the hands of Constable Neff They were arrested at midnight by breaking in the door of their bed room, taken before Squire Harden, plead guilty to assault and battery, and lined $10 each and costs. Old Fashioned Harvesting. PICTURESQUE FARMING IN CALIFORNIA IN THE FORTIES. General Bidwell,'in the December Century. Harvesting, with the rude imple ments, was a scene. Imagine three or four hundred wild Indians in a grain field armed, some with sickles, some with butcher-knives, some with pieces of hoop iron roughly fashioned into shapes like sickles, but many having only their hands with which to gather by small handtuls the dry and brittle gram ; and as their bands would soon become sore, they resorted to dry wil low sticks, which were split to afford a sharper edge with which to sever th straw. But the wildest part was the threshing. The harvest of weeks, sometimes of a month, was piled up in the straw in the form of a huge mound in the middle of a hip-h. Btronff. round cor ral ; then three or four hundred wild horseb were turned in to thresh it, the Indians whooping to make them ru faster. Suddenly they would dash in before the band at lull speed, when th motion became reversed, with the ef fect of plowing up the trampled straw to the very bottom. In an hour the grain would be thoroughly threshed and the dry straw broken almost into chaff. In this manner I have seen two thousand bushels of wheat threshed in a single hour. Next came the winnow- would otten Real Estate Transfers. B. F. Whitehead and wife to Wm. H Hoover, 120 acres and 41 poles, Harri son township, quit claim, $901 02. James H. Hoover, et al, to Wm. M. Hoover, 120 acres and 41 poles, quit claim, Harrison township, $2, tOo.76. Henry P. Folsom and wife to Anna ii. Brown, $ acre, Circleville, jdio, W. L. Morgan and wife to Wm. Mor ris, Lots 43 and 44, Morgan, $130. W. L. Morgan and wife to James A Curry, Lot 28, Morgan, $100, W. L. Morgan and wife to David Westwater, Lot4o, Morgan, $100. W. L. Morgan and wife to J as. Ross, Lot 33, Morgan, $ 05 W. L. Morgan and wife to Angel Ross, Lot 4s, Morgan, $350. W. L. Morgan and wife to Thomas Noble, Lots 46 and 47, Morgan, 5130. Jas. T. Wallace, Sheriff, to Jacob F. Krinn, Lot 1250, Circleville, $710. Nelson F. Kinnear and wife to Thos H. Carpenter, 102 acres and 65 poles, Muhlenberg township, $a00 James T. Wallace, Sheriff, to Wm M. Hoover, 120 acres and 41 poles, Har rison township, $4,810.25, Peter S. Lutz and wife to Jonathan l - ... 1 , 1 .1 1. tarrMIIrl ntT.OY1 t.aa annth.. stand the lesson, it will be repeated tol montljl. j.t could only be done when to tha way in which they will knock them with increased emphasis in 1892. the wind wag blowing, by throwing H. Lutz, 14 acres and 13 poles, Salt creek township, $3b0. John T. Dowler and wife to Charles C. Morgan, 2 acres and 68 poles, Deer creek township, $J,ba0. Robert S. Yoakum and wife to Ame lia Gouchenouer, 5 acres, Scioto town ship, $450. David Sells and wife to Mahlon Mor ris, 14 square poles, Saltcreek township, $40. James Orr and wife to John ' and Clara Ahn, parfs of Lote 1228 and 1229, Circleville. $1,700. Samuel Boggs and wife to H. F. Pace, 250 acres, Pickaway township, $12,000. Peter Wolf and wife to Henry Pfen nig, (0 acres and lua poles, washing- ton township, quit claim, jioo au. . James T. Wallace, Sheriff, to Henry Pfennig, 70 acres and 102 poles, Washington township, $2,366 35. Albert Hedges and wife to Sarah M. Moore, Lot 4, Ashville, $S5. Albert J. Grigsby, Assignee of John T. Ruth, to Samuel Hall and John R. Vanmeter, 161 acres, Scioto township, $7,500. jr - Henry Whiteman to Nancy M. To bias, Lot 23, East Ringgold, $300. Samuel W. Miller, Guardian, to M. C. Millar, 67J acres, Scioto township, $1,345. George W. Wilson to John M. Cline, 30J acres, Walnut township, $l,buu. I. N. Abernethy and wife to Frank Fuller, Lot 1479, Circleville, $275. James Baggs to Nancy E. Troutman, 40 poles, Five Points, $150. J. H. Simmons, United States Mar shal, to George W. Roby, "66 acre and 117 poles, Jackson township, $11,000. Cookery and Poetic Jingles. In Kansas City, Mrs. Emma Ewing has been lecturing on Monday after noons on llow to Make Bread. Her lectures are under the auspices of the ladies of Calvary Baptist Church, and this is their very fetching rhymed invitation : 'Tis love," they say, "that makes this - globe Go round without confusion." But Mrs. Ewing says she's reached A different conclusion : Namely, ;hat we are, all of us, Poor rrs -arable sinners, nd will not help the world go round Without delicious dinners. And surely those of us who're blest With husbands, and can lead them, Know that the kay to our success, Is in the way we feed them. So take the hint, and, though you're sweet And wise and pretty looking Come up to Calvary Baptist Church, And learn the art of cooking. current'items. Iceland's geyserB are nearly spent. A return of black ulsters is menaced. Ten ordinary eggs will weigh a pound. The "hypodermic blush" lasts two hours. The Panama canal "has been aban doned for good." Petroleum bas been struck at Lake Athabasca, Can. The demi-train street dress is to be revived, it is said. The Yosemite Valley has had 3,200 visitors this season. Black and red feathered fowls are al ways the best eating. A Californian makes a business of raising halt Dreed Duttaioes. The sixteenth century may be called the "Golden Age" of tapestry. Wvoming's soda deposits have been sold to a $2,000,000 foreign syndicate. California has received $30,000,000 from its green fruit trade this season. Twenty million acres of the land of the United States are held byforeigners. The army of "social spongers are those who always go but are neverreceived. The Texas cotton crop is estimated at 1,850,000 bales, the biggest in the history of the State. Adam Monts. of Bigby Fork, Miss., who is ninety-four years of age, has 400 descendants living. One Colorado county has 100 artesian wells. New ones do not decrease the flow of the old ones. The wife of Ex Governor St. John, of Kansas, is drawing large audiences in the West as a lecturer. x A circular mass of pink and white chrysanthemums makes a popular table decoration of the season. The Catskills are presenting a bril liant appearance, as the sun shines up. on their white, wintry mantle. The first and only modern windmill in London is to be seen at work on the top of a warehouse in the City Road, London. Thirty-six years ago the first settler built his house in Omaha, and the Indians reluctantly fell back a few miles to the west. The Austrian minister of public in struction requests masters of public schools to cultivate a taste for athletics among their boys. Two of the albums sent to the inter national exhibition of postage) stamps at Vienna, were insured for 2,590 and 3,000 respectively. The number of women who avail themselves of the co educational privileges offered by Michigan University is constantly increasing. Half a dozen New York ladies are said to earn a handsome living by hold ing conversation classes and giving pri vate lessons in that art. A sensation in New York recently was a handsome turnout drawn by two well groomed mules, driven by a handsome liveried coachman. There are now four widows of Su preme Court Justices living in Washington, Mrs. Waite, Mrs. Wood, Mrs. Stanley Matthews and Mrs. Miller. A young girl rode her horse through a store door at Lynchburg, Va., the other afternoon, made her purchase, said good-by and backed gracefully out. The average duration of life is great er in Norway than in any other coun try in Europe, lhis is attributed to the uniform cool temperature of the climate. A drainage and plumbing bill of $150,- 000 is large for one individual to settle, but the auke of irortland has recently completed improvements to that amount. Iron collars for heavy work horses are coming into use. They weigh less than seven pounds, and the advantage of their use is said to be immunity from sore necks. There are men and men, as there are sandwiches and sandwiches. There is nothing in some ol them, and in others the more there is so much the worse. Boston Transcript. The Bellefontaine Examiner says : The prominence given by the press of the country to base ball and the dead-beats who play it, is simply disgusting to intelligent readers. The Indianian who got a pension for nervous shock, due to "stopping a cannon ball with his abdomen,' is to be congratulated that the shock left him a fair supply of nerve. During the last fifteen years the en. rolled military force of the leading European nations has doubled. There are now 11,000 000 men in Europe ready to be called into the field. Brazil is larger than the United States, but in the whole twenty states which make up the republic there are not as many people as we have in New York and Pennsylvania. The number of immigrants who arrived in the United States at the six principal ports during the ten months ending October 31 last, was 427,666, against 378,140 during the same period of 1889. The yield of corn in Southern Indiana is said to be much better than had been anticipated, with the best river bottom lands showing crops running as high as sixty bushels per acre, the quality being excellent Spring Grove, York county, Pa., is a musical town, with a population ot 600 to 700, there are in the town five pianos, thirty-three orgaDS, two brass bands nd an orchestra, besides numberless small musical instruments. Senator Hearst's gold mine is the largest in a group of mines near Dead, wood, South Dakota, and is said to be th richest mine in the world. Three thousand miners are employed upon it, and they take out from $150,000 to $200,000 every month. Of eighty-five Irish members of Parliament no less than twenty six have been imprisoned for political offenses. The Lord Mayor of Dublin, the Mayor of Cork, the Mayor of Clonmel and the Mayor of Sligo are among the number of distinguished prisoners. The Salvation Army has made an important capture in Baroness Margaret of Lilienkruz, who has enrolled herself in Berlin and is already in active ser vice, fche is a woman i means who became disgusted with t!o s bsms and shitiV-Tr-. I '. Hfe, nnd hen" - .Lout Lc.;..h" ntll; A l .... i.iU..b lVyift.